Highland Surrender
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5.0 • 2 Ratings
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- £4.49
Publisher Description
With his family’s honor on the line, Norse warrior Erik Halverson has no choice but to follow the orders of the royal house of Denmark. Now he must follow his destiny—and royal command—to sail to Scotland, find his enemy’s weakest link, and abduct her. Their mistake, of course, was thinking the Sinclair lass wouldn’t fight back.
From the moment her four brothers took control of their clan, Hannah Sinclair has learned to stand tall and defend herself. So when a big, brawny, and admittedly handsome warrior tries to abduct her, she isn’t about to give in. And the more he tries, the more she’s determined to make it as hard as possible...and enjoy it all the while.
Now Norway’s greatest warrior has a Highland hellcat on his hands, and Odin help him, he can’t resist her. But with the brutal Sinclair brothers coming after them, Erik is out of options. War is inevitable. And when a man is forced to choose between duty and passion, only one will win…
Each book in the Sons of Sinclair series is STANDALONE:
* Highland Conquest
* Highland Warrior
* Highland Justice
* Highland Beast
* Highland Surrender
Customer Reviews
Royal Plots, Abduction and Headstrong Warriors
At thirty years of age Hannah Sinclair is still a maiden, her four warrior brothers having frightened all men away from her. Desperate to have a child of her own, she forms a plan to seduce a stranger to their lands, however Erik has a hidden agenda and Hannah quickly finds herself abducted and on her way to Denmark. I loved Hannah’s strength of purpose, her clever brain and the camaraderie between her and her brothers wives. Erik and her brothers were typical warriors who wanted to fight and kill first, then think later. It is only at the intervention of Hannah that no blood is spilled and her insistence that sometimes you must fall back to move forward, sparks an audacious plan to free the Sinclair family of future Danish plots.
I’ve not read any of the other books in this series but although the secondary characters featured heavily, there were never any obscure references to previous happenings to leave the reader at a loss or throw one out of the storyline. Nor was the reader peppered with unnecessary information about them - a true standalone book.
I voluntarily read and reviewed an advanced copy of this book from NetGalley. All thoughts and opinions are my own.