![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sure, I had issues with Sebastian as he could be an ass, but I understood where he was coming from. The arguments that the characters had about these topics were insightful and in tune with the time period that they were in. Additionally, the themes of intellect, freedom, safety, and voice were potent. I found this to be one of the most compelling parts of the novel because I love when characters change for the better because of each other. Sebastian took me a while to warm up to, but his huge personal changes really sold him to me. ![]() It was a fun and steamy read! Annabelle was an incredibly likable character, but I felt like she never fully got the credit that she deserved. When passions enter the situation the Sebastian has to decide how much his family legacy is worth and Annabelle has to decide how far she’ll go for independence. Who hast just been asked by the Queen to support the Tories. Between studying, protesting, tutoring pupils (because god forbid her cousin let her go without her paying for her replacement in his house!), she’s somehow gotten involved with personally convincing Sebastian, the Duke of Montgomery, to support the suffragettes. Annabelle is accepted into Oxford University’s first women’s cohort, where she attends under a scholarship that requires her to be apart of a women’s suffrage movement. Synopsis: Annabelle Archer is a bit too bright for her own good, especially when you consider she’s a poor country vicar’s daughter. ![]()
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