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BizStore » Books » Slightly Scandalous
BizStore » Book
Slightly Scandalous
Slightly Scandalous
List Price: $6.99
Our Price: $6.99
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Dell Publishing
Publisher: Dell Publishing
Author(s): Mary Balogh

Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5 (based on 48 reviews)

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Editorial Review:
Meet the Bedwyns…six brothers and sisters-- men and women of passion and privilege, daring and sensuality.

Enter their dazzling world of high society and breathtaking seduction…where each will seek love, fight temptation, and court scandal…and where Freyja Bedwyn, the wild-hearted daughter, meets her match in a man as passionate, reckless, and scandalous as she.

Growing up with four unruly brothers has made Freyja Bedwyn far bolder than most society ladies. From feisty manner to long, tumbling hair, Lady Freyja is pure fire, a woman who seeks both adventure and freedom.

Adventure soon finds her on a visit to Bath, when a handsome stranger bursts into Freyja's room and entreats her to hide him. His name is Joshua Moore, Marquess of Hallmere, a man with a hell-raising reputation of his own who is quickly intrigued by the independent beauty. So intrigued, in fact, that he makes her a surprising request: to pose as his fiancée and help thwart his family's matchmaking schemes. For two people determined to be free, it's the perfect plan…until passion blindsides them both. For as Joshua sets out to achieve his complete seduction of Freyja, a woman who has sworn off love is in danger of losing the one thing she never expected to give again: her heart…
Customer Reviews:
Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: The haughty and unusual Freyja meets her match in Joshua, a laughing Adonis
Comment: This is a very enjoyable book. The sparring between Freyja and Joshua is wonderful and it's funny seeing her lose her temper with him - sometimes in very public places. They have very different personalities, but complement each other very well and seem destined for one another (and the chemistry between them is great!). One of the highlights is encountering the other members of the Bedwyn family again; they contribute greatly to a few of the entertaining and humorous scenes.

SUMMARY (Bedwyn Family, Book 3):
Lady Freyja Bedwyn goes to stay with a friend in Bath to avoid the birth of a past flame's child (Kit Butler, hero of A Summer to Remember). Joshua Moore, Marquess of Hallmere, is in Bath to visit his grandmother after gallivanting around Europe (and doing unofficial spy work) for five years. They meet and enjoy several *very* amusing incidents, leading to an impulsively created fake betrothal to help Joshua avoid an undesired forced one. While the betrothal was only supposed to stand for a few days, it ends up lengthening all the way to Lindsey Hall (Bedwyn home) and then to Penhallow in Cornwall (Hallmere's home). Balogh includes the usual villain subplot (this one is well-employed), dastardly relatives, past ghosts and demons to be faced and overcome, but in the end the book is an enjoyable read and as always, it's a treat to see the hero and heroine get their happily-ever-after.

MAIN CHARACTERS, Freyja and Joshua:
Lady Freyja Bedwyn is the third youngest Bedywn sibling and is 25 years old at the time of the story. If you have read previous Bedwyn family books, you may not be predisposed to like her; she's arrogant and haughty and in the aforementioned A Summer to Remember, she's horribly malicious and unfriendly to Lauren. Slightly Scandalous shows a different side to her, however, and we find that she's also a lonely woman with a sensitive side, who hides this in order to not appear vulnerable or be hurt again. A plus in my opinion is that she's not the normal beauty - well, actually she's not a beauty at all, and is considered ugly at worst, and somewhat handsome and interesting-looking at best.

Joshua Moore, Marquess of Hallmere is 28 years old and comes off at first as a devil-may-care blond Adonis whose laughing eyes show him to be the rogue he is and nothing more. Of course (surprise, surprise!), this is not the case, and although he is a cheerful man whose teasing grin comes easily, his childhood was an unhappy one and his past is riddled with painful secrets. He is a very charming and engaging character who initially comes off as shallow and unable to take anything seriously, but is actually a very thoughtful and kind man.

Neither Freyja nor Joshua expect their light flirtation to turn into anything serious and due to this, they are actually a little afraid to get to know each other on any other level. She doesn't want to see beyond the laughing roguishness and he only wants to have fun by teasing her into losing her haughty temper. Of course, love gets in the way!

FAVORITE LINE:
"Freyja," he said, "what are you doing for the rest of your life?" ::sigh::

BOTTOM LINE:
Although if you read many of Balogh's books you'll start to experience deja vu quite frequently (some of the lines, the idea of a fake betrothal that will later be called off, etc.), she's an excellent writer and this is a highly enjoyable read and must-have if you're going through the whole Bedwyn family series. Enjoy!

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Not as good as other Balogh titles
Comment: I have had the pleasure of reading several of Balogh's other titles, but this is my first foray into the Bedwyn family. While I did enjoy the book, I found it to be repetitious. Everything was "haughty". Freyja had a haughty tone, a haughty manner, haughty expressions, she conducted herself haughtily. By the time I finished reading the first few chapters, I was heartily sick of the word "haughty".

And apparently, in order to make the reader believe that Freyja is spirited and strongwilled, she must punch people in the nose. It was amusing the first time because it could be deemed unexpected. But after she punched the hero twice, and tried to smack him a few other times, it got silly. By the time she decks the marchioness, instead of being the satisfying scene that it should have been, it was just tired (it didn't take a rocket scientist to see that punch coming from a mile away).

There are other repetitive devices throughout... Josh grins and winks alot... Wulf isn't just cold and aloof, he's wooden, and seems to be having a love affair with that quizzing glass...the marchioness is shrill, simpers and falsely appears weak despite the fact that no one seems to fall for her act. And just how many times do the various Bedwyn siblings have to verbally state their superiority? "We ARE Bedwyns"... I kept waiting for someone to add "Hear us roar" every time someone said that.

Despite how it might sound, I actually enjoyed the story for the most part, but it pales next to many of other Balogh's other works. I am still curious to see how other Bedwyn titles pan out even though I found this one to be subpar.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Taming of the Shrew
Comment: If you've been following the Bedwyn series, you'll already know Lady Freyja Bedwyn. Haughty, shrewish, with the prominent Bedwyn nose and, at best, referred to as 'handsome', her best feature is her family name and wealth. She's refused suitors galore and frozen others out long before they've had a chance to get close to proposing. Up to this point, you might be forgiven for thinking that she doesn't have a lot to recommend her as a heroine. You might be forgiven for actively disliking her.

Balogh goes some way to change readers' perceptions of Freyja in the first chapter. She's travelling to Bath, to stay with people she doesn't really like very much, but then she doesn't want to be anywhere near the Bedwyn family home at the moment because their neighbours, the Ravensburgs, are about to have their first child... and Freyja was all-but jilted by Kit Ravensburg (A Summer to Remember) and she hasn't yet got over that. En route to Bath, her bedroom is invaded by a man who begs her not to reveal his presence and then hides in the wardrobe. She doesn't give him away, but when he kisses her she gives him a bloody nose. Well, we find out that she's no shrinking violet, certainly. Next, we get an intriguing glimpse of her visiting a school to enquire after its well-being and being sent away with a flea in her ear by the owner... who we discover was a former governess of Freyja's and whom she treated badly. Unknown to the governess, Freyja has been secretly funding the school ever since - another insight into her character.

Freyja's mysterious inn encounter turns out to have been with none other than Joshua, the Marquess of Hallmere. They clash again in Bath, but then begin to find that they actually enjoy each other's company. Then, as Joshua is being actively pursued and almost compromised into marrying a cousin, Freyja agrees to 'rescue' him by pretending to be his fiancee, an arrangement they will call off once Joshua feels safe. All's well that ends well - until someone gossips in the Duke of Bedwyn's hearing. The Duke hurries to Bath to find out what his sister is up to and insists that she bring her fiance home to meet the family. All is still well, as they plan for Freyja to break off the engagement with some excuse later... and yet she doesn't. When Joshua finds himself accused of murder, Freyja and most of the Bedwyns decamp to his home to help him clear his name, and he and Freyja are even more cast into each other's company. Can Freyja trust Joshua enough to overcome her determination that he's not a good husband? Does he really want to marry her anyway, or is he just teasing?

By this time, I was getting a little tired of the 'fake betrothal' plot; we've had it three times, what with A Summer to Remember, Slightly Wicked and now this book, plus the marriage of convenience in Slightly Married. Yet I should have trusted Balogh. The execution of the plot isn't at all cliched, and the characters sparkle. It didn't take me long at all to feel empathy and then liking for Freyja - if you're tired of prim-and-proper heroines, then she's perfect. She's forthright, which means she puts her foot in it, but her heart's in the right place. Joshua is irreverent, with a huge sense of fun, which leads Freyja to think that he can't take anything seriously - which isn't true, but he enjoys letting her think that it is. Their dialogue sparkles, and Joshua himself is a worthy hero. Probably the best of the first three books.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Balogh has series issues with originality
Comment: Again, I have to play both sides of the coin, as I have done with the other Balogh books that I have read. I've got some good things, and some bad things that I can say.

Overall, the book wasn't too bad. I ended up not disliking Freyja as much as I did in the previous books, but I still didn't quite like her. She was a bit too much of a snob. I really enjoyed Josh, though. The romance was fairly nice between Josh and Freyja, and the overall storyarc made sense and all that. I liked the parts surrounding Josh's family. It added some nice depth to the story. So yeah, overall, I didn't mind the book so much.

On the flip side of the coin, I became increasingly aware during reading the book, that Balogh really likes to recycle her own ideas. It got annoying. Part of the main hook in the book was a fake betrothal between Freyja and Josh. That was by far not original for Balogh, and especially this series. In the prequel, A Summer to Remember, Lauren and Kit do the exact same thing for pretty much the exact same reasons. And in Slightly Married, Aidan and Eve enter into an almost fake marriage - one of convenience. So having that same hook used for Slightly Scandalous was tedious and repetitive.

And even aside from that Balogh, has a tendency to recycle even simple things. The characters tend to have almost the exact same thoughts or phrasing on something that should be original to them. And she's ended the books almost all the same. I think it was in A Summer to Remember where Lauren speaks about the sea, calling it wild and uncontrollable..and all these other more poetic descriptions. Then in Slightly Scandalous, Freyja says almost the exact same thing. It struck me as ridiculously unoriginal. She also likes to have her characters say something like "no, I do not want happily-ever-after; I just want happiness" or something to that effect. It's a nice line, but having too many characters in too many books repeat it takes away it's effectiveness. Then there's the endings of the books. They all seem to end with a wedding scene followed by the bride and the groom standing outside the church before all the revelers, wondering if they should just mosey on along to their carriage, or whether they should make a spirited run for it. It was cute the first 1 or 2 times...but as an ending to every book? Not so much. It's unrealistic and silly. And one of the biggest annoyances? The use of the word "haughty". I'd hate to see a word count of it. It'd be astronomical. I think the word comes up in every sentence Wulf is mentioned, and if not haughty, then cold. By the end of Slightly Scandalous, I wanted to bang my head into a wall.

I think if a person read the books in the series over a longer course in time, instead of one after another like I'm doing, these things could probably be overlooked. But when read quickly together, the faults really stand out. Even so, it wasn't really a bad story. I didn't mind it so much.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Good read...
Comment: This book is great. I love Freyja she is such a spit fire. And Joshua needed to get his keester hit a couple times by Freyja. This book is funny and cleaver. I would recommend it to anyone.



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