![]() The obstacles to their love are simple but real: curvy Joan doesn't know how to love her body or dress to flatter it, and Tristan's unhappy family life gives him good reasons to fear marriage. With less chaperoning, Joan and Tristan become closer, letting attraction take its course. Of course, that's before her parents have to leave town and her scandalous Aunt Evangeline comes to "chaperone." Linden somehow makes the Regency romance feel new again with this warm, likeable novel. When her brother's cheerfully disreputable friend Tristan Burke becomes his houseguest, Tristan and Joan strike up a flirtation that neither of them expects to go anywhere. She's also addicted to a not-so-respectable publication called 50 Ways To Sin. ![]() Joan Bennet is a respectable young lady worried that she'll never find a husband. ![]()
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