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Lord of Desire: A Rouge Historical Romance
Lord of Desire: A Rouge Historical Romance
Oct 8, 2024 2:22 PM

Author:Nicole Jordan

Lord of Desire: A Rouge Historical Romance

Algeria, 1847. Alysson Vickery, wealthy, beautiful, and wildly rebellious, leaves France to join her fiancé, a French colonel, in war-torn Algiers. There she meets Nicholas Sterling, son of an English noblewoman and a Berber sheik. Known as Jafar el-Saleh, the notorious golden-haired Algerian rebel, he has sworn vengeance against the French colonel whom he holds responsible for his parents' deaths.

Reviews

Sizzling passion

—— Christina Dodd

Sweep-you-away romance

—— Susan Wiggs

A great writer. You'll be rooting for Noble's protagonists as soon as you meet them

—— Daily Mail

Praise for Elizabeth Noble

—— -

Noble is the mistress of the tearjerking message of love

—— Express

Witty, affectionate and unashamedly tear-jerking

—— Red

Honest and beautifully written

—— Woman & Home

Deliciously readable

—— Times

Impossible to finish without tears streaming down your face

—— Daily Express

Witty, pacy and immediately engaging

—— Glamour

A wonderfully well-written book, full of emotion

—— Daily Mail

Incredibly thought-provoking and poignant

—— Sun

Irresistible comfort read

—— Glamour

So fluid, the pages turn themselves

—— Daily Mirror

It would be a hard heart indeed that remained unmoved . . . the tender feelings that Noble engenders in her readers are to be cherished

—— Daily Express

Tissues are essential. You'll ricochet between delicately watering eyes at the romance of it all and howling sobs at the unbearable tenderness

—— Heat

Full of ideas

—— Claire Allfree , Metro

Dazzling

—— Essentials

Fans of Ian McEwan should rejoice with this arrival of this novel, because Sweet Tooth is McEwan's finest work since 2001's Atonement

—— Kevin Power , Sunday Business Post

Given McEwan’s ability to make riveting fiction out of English politics (not easy), it would be hard to imagine anyone better equipped to write such a story... Delicious... Gripping

—— James Lasdun , Guardian

His assumption of a female persona is pitch-perfect

—— Michael Arditti , Daily Mail

Had McEwan, through Serena’s benefit of hindsight in narrating her life, planted the clues? Let every reader have the pleasure of finding out

—— Ion Trewin , Sunday Express

An artful game of distortion... Clever handling

—— Anthony Quinn , Mail on Sunday

A curious piece of autobiographical fiction

—— David Sexton , Evening Standard

A wisecracking thriller hightailing between love and betrayal, with serious counter-espionage credentials thrown in... This is ultimately a book about writing, wordplay and knowingness

—— Catherine Taylor , Sunday Telegraph

No contemporary novelist is more enthralled by what goes on inside the human skull than Ian McEwan... Sweet Tooth, which juxtaposes contrasting casts of mind, reminds you that, as well as intelligence, the intelligence service fascinates McEwan... Always excellent at conjuring up places and periods on the cusp of dramatic change... McEwan atmospherically resurrects the strife-ridden Britain of 1972 -73... Similarities and contrasts between the mentality and mind games of the secret service and those of the creative writer are increasingly brought to the fore. Doubling back and forth across genre boundaries, Sweet Tooth takes risks: narrative loiterings and twists whose purpose isn’t at first apparent, a payoff that is long delayed. But – ideally read more than once – this acute, witty novel is a winningly cunning addition to McEwan’s fictional surveys of intelligence

—— Peter Kemp , Sunday Time

Must read... Intrigue, love and mutual betrayal by a master of the art

—— The Lady

The great thing about McEwan is that, despite his success, he continues to work hard, producing ever more accessible and entertaining stories

—— Henry Sutton , Daily Mirror

Carefully researched

—— John Scarlett , Daily Telegraph

McEwan, as always, presents an engaging narrator... The plot is fantastic... McEwan plays with the readers expectations, and surpasses them all with a fabulous ending that makes me itch to re-read this superb novel all over again. Sweet Tooth marks another triumph for a brilliant British author

—— Bookgeeks.co.uk

A pleasing, tricksy beast with a subsumed sense of metatextuality likely to be pleasing to his fans

—— Bookmunch

Adroitly done...highly diverting

—— D.J. Taylor , Literary Review

A triumphant shedding of genre limitations

—— Adam Mars-Jones , London Review of Books

This most cunning of authors entertains and manipulates his readers. Sweet Tooth is a masterclass in the art of fiction

—— Paul Sidey , Book Oxygen

Ian McEwan is getting better and better… Supremely tense, intellectually sharp, and honed as hell

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

McEwan’ssmoothly contrived thriller hightails between love and betrayal, with serious counter-espionage credentials thrown in

—— Sunday Telegraph Seven

An expertly crafted thriller written with a bucketload of suspense and wit

—— Hannah Britt , Daily Express

As richly textured as anything Ian McEwan has written

—— Mai

Brilliantly cunning… It’s a story of love, betrayal and duplicity, with the most startling deception reserved for the final pages

—— Mail on Sunday (You)

Playful, clever, knowing and full of stories

—— Absolutely Chelsea

Supremely tense, intellectually sharp, and honed as hell

—— William Leith , Scotsman

Beyond virtuoso twists and turns, McEwan lays out the foreign landscape of 40 years ago – from smoky pubs to fuming punditry – with wry, affectionate panache

—— Boyd Tonkin , i

Tricksy, but satisfying

—— Justin Cartwright , Observer

The sense of narrative purpose exerts its pull from the first

—— John Mullan , Guardian

Fans of Ian McEwan should rejoice with this arrival of this novel, because Sweet Tooth is McEwan's finest work since 2001's Atonement.

—— Kevin Power , Sunday Business Post

His assumption of a female persona is pitch-perfect.

—— Michael Arditti , Daily Mail

Must read... Intrigue, love and mutual betrayal by a master of the art.

—— The Lady

Gripping.

—— Evening Standard ES Magazine

Full of ideas.

—— Claire Allfree , Metro

Cleverly metafictional.

—— Sam Leith , Prospect

One of the most hotly anticipated novels of the year...it’s brilliant.

—— Sunday Business Post

McEwan, as always, presents an engaging narrator... The plot is fantastic... McEwan plays with the readers expectations, and surpasses them all with a fabulous ending that makes me itch to re-read this superb novel all over again. Sweet Tooth marks another triumph for a brilliant British author.

—— Bookgeeks.co.uk

A pleasing, tricksy beast with a subsumed sense of metatextuality likely to be pleasing to his fans.

—— Bookmunch

This most cunning of authors entertains and manipulates his readers. Sweet Tooth is a masterclass in the art of fiction.

—— Paul Sidey , Book Oxygen

Ian McEwan proves he’s still the master penman with his twelfth novel.

—— Grazia

Dazzling.

—— Essentials
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