
How To Train A Viscount by Bianca Blythe
How to Train a Viscount by Bianca Blythe Series: The Wedding Trouble Series Book #4
on May 20, 2019
Genres: Fiction / Romance / Historical / Regency, Fiction / Romance / Historical / Victorian
Pages: 234
Goodreads
Enjoy Bianca Blythe's delightful Wedding Trouble regency romance series today!
She'll make a viscount out of you.
Pretty, intelligent Lady Isla McIntyre knows everything about being an aristocrat. She was supposed to become a duchess, until her fiancé brazenly eloped with another woman.
Adam is shocked when his employer unexpectedly becomes a viscount, but he is more shocked when his employer is murdered. When the killer spots Adam, there's only one thing Adam can do: flee. Fortunately, he has his employer's papers with him, including a boarding ticket to England. Less fortunately, everyone is eager to introduce him as a new viscount. If Adam is going to avoid imprisonment for impersonating a nobleman, he needs to convince people that he actually is one. The only problem? He doesn't know anything about being an aristocrat.
Now Isla has plenty of time on her hands and is eager to distract herself from her new status as an ostracized spinster. Might Adam and Isla ever be more than teacher and student?
An entertaining regency romance with a strong heroine and a man in disguise. Set on the English Channel in wonderful Brighton.
Start this series today!
The Wedding Trouble Series
1. Don't Tie the Knot
2. Dukes Prefer Bluestockings
3. The Earl's Christmas Consultant
4. How to Train a Viscount
5. The Bachelor Marquess
6. A Holiday Proposal
How to Train A Viscount is book four in The Wedding Trouble series by Bianca Blythe. Lady Isla, who was the debutante left at the altar in book two is the heroine. Although she was incredibly rude, haughty and arrogant in the previous book, this story reveals a deeper side to Isla. She is touchable, vulnerable, even relatable. I understand her previous actions. This is her redemption story. I thought the hero Adam was a likable character and as he learns to be a peer, he happens to be quite funny. “In truth, there shouldn’t have been anything remarkable about brown hair and brown eyes. They were the most common color of hair and eyes. Yet, somehow his eyes seemed warm, imparting a strength like coffee, a strength that made her giddy and made her remember the taste long after. Strands of his hair were light, as if he’d spent time in the sun and was unaware of the existence of hats. He met her gaze and she jerked her head away, conscious of warmth inundating her cheeks.” I especially liked the pet monkey Thabisa. I thought her addition was clever. Bravo Ms. Blythe for another well written romance. A hilarious and steamy page-turner that I enjoyed.





