![]() ![]() The laird, Jamie MacLeod thought she was a witch so he immediately threw her into a pit where all kinds of slithering things crawled all over her. Then she was transported back in time to medieval Scotland where she was taken to the MacLeod keep. ![]() This book should have been titled “The Taming of the Caveman” because the protagonist didn't act much better than a neanderthal for most of the book.Įlizabeth Smith dreamed of a Scottish man. Elizabeth would turn his ordered world upside down and go where no woman had ever gone before: straight into his heart. A forest surrounding the castle of James MacLeod, an arrogant and handsome lord with a very familiar voice. She dozed off on a bench-and woke up in a lush forest in forteenth-century Scotland. To clear her mind, she took a walk in Gramercy Park. But she knew she was overworked when she began hearing his voice-when she was awake. Elizabeth longed for the man of her dreams. Until a Scottish hero began calling to her. With an indifferent fiance and a stalled writing career, Elizabeth Smith found passion and adventure only in the unpublished romance novels that she wrote. And he allowed no women to cross the threshold of his keep. ![]() He loved his men like brothers and his land with a passion. James MacLeod was the most respected-and feared-laird in all of Scotland. From Lynn Kurland, the New York Times bestselling author of the Nine Kingdom series. ![]()
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