Wendy the Super Librarian‘s review of Texas Wedding For Their Baby’s Sake by Kathryn Albright
Historical romance released by Harlequin Historical 1 Sep 09
As readers, oftentimes when we read a book we love, we immediately hope for a sequel. Sometimes those sequels are just as good, and sometimes it’s a case of be careful what you wish for. I loved the first book in this series, The Rebel And The Lady, and gave it a glowing review last year. I really and truly adored it. So naturally, I was looking forward to this follow-up romance, featuring the wayward Brandon Dumont, who left behind a sweetheart in South Carolina to join the fight for Texas’ independence. I wish I could say this story worked just as well for me, and I loved it just as much. Sadly, I cannot.
Five months ago Brandon Dumont arrived in Texas to join the fight for independence. He ended up getting captured and was ultimately rescued from a Mexican prison camp by his older brother, Jake. A doctor, Santa Anna only kept him alive to tend to the hundreds of wounded Mexican troops. He walked away from the ordeal bitter, scarred, with a bum leg, and a serious case of post-traumatic stress. Brandon is completely out of sorts, treading water, with no plans for his future. The only thing on his agenda is the impending arrival of Franklin, the family hired hand from Charleston, who is making the trip for Jake’s upcoming wedding to his fiancee’, Victoria. Imagine their surprise when Franklin arrives with the lovely Miss Caroline Benet in tow.
Caroline and Brandon were sweethearts that were planning to marry. However, a failure to communicate, and a kiss shared between Caroline and Jake (oopsie!) sent Brandon running off to Texas. Since he hasn’t returned to Charleston, she decides to take matters into her own hands and go to Texas to find him. See, the poor gal is pregnant with his baby, and she’s determined to let him know he’s going to be a daddy. It does come as a shock to her though that the Brandon she finds in Texas is completely different from the Brandon she fell in love with in Charleston.
This story requires an extreme amount of patience on the part of the reader, and it was only my love for the first book that had me persevering through to the grand finale. Brandon and Caroline are “torn apart” because they’re both two stupid kids who won’t talk to each other. My profuse apologies to all the Regency romance couples I maligned over the years for “not talking to each other.” Turns out romantic couples from the American South also suffer from the affliction.
When Brandon isn’t having a pity party for himself, he’s pushing Caroline away for “her own good.” No, they can’t be together. He’s too damaged. He’s no good. Besides that, she done him wrong. Caroline starts out equally as shaky: a prim Southern belle who’s sole purpose in life is to look pretty, smile and do needlepoint. She’s a bit of a stuck-up snob once she lands in Texas, simply horrified that Brandon would want to live like this rather than returning to South Carolina. But do you think she tells him about the baby right away? Of course not! That revelation doesn’t come out until after they fall into each others’ arms again and Jake finally notices that she’s got a baby bump.
Adding to my annoyance was the fact that Jake, the wonderful hero from The Rebel And The Lady, who I adored, was an insufferable jackass for about three-quarters of this book.
Still, I kept reading – and I was rewarded for it, because the story did get better for me. Brandon keeps up his noble, sending-away-the-woman-I-love-for-her-own-good nonsense pretty much until the bitter end – but Jake stops being an ass and glory be, Caroline grows up. The girl reaches deep down and finds her spine. She starts giving it to Brandon with both barrels and when she actually calls him a coward (to his face!) I wanted to reach through the pages and kiss the girl. Truly.
It took some patience on my part, but I found the ending of this story ultimately rewarding. Unfortunately I had to slog through the first half of this novel to get to that point, and there really wasn’t a whole lot I liked there. In the end, I found it a disappointing follow-up to one of my favorite historicals from last year. Bummer.
Summary:
Brandon Dumont is not the man he was. Embittered by war, he’s now a rugged survivor, a broken hero. Certain he’s not fit for society, he finds his lonely self-imposed exile shattered by the arrival of the woman he once bedded and left behind.
Since her fiancé went to war, social butterfly Caroline Benét has had to grow up fast. She’s held up a stagecoach at gunpoint and left the safety of Charleston for wild Texas territory—all to find a man she no longer knows…for the sake of their unborn child….
Other books in this series:
So what is the timeline of this, if it’s been five months since Brandon was rescued and her baby bump isn’t obvious? A pregnancy in the third trimester is usually visible.
Liviania: He literally takes off for Texas like a week after they do the deed. So when she shows up in Texas to find him – she’s 5 months pregnant. And honestly, it irritated the hell out of me that he didn’t notice the baby bump until after they succumb to passion and have sex again. He doesn’t notice the baby bump until she’s standing before him half-dressed. Of course considering how self-centered I found the hero, I probably shouldn’t have been surprised that he failed to notice a little thing like a 5-6 month pregnancy. Gah!
Sorry Liviania – I’m slow on the uptake today! I just realized the wording in my review was really wonky, and it made the time line confusing. I’ve since gone in and edited it. D’oh!
I bought this when it first came out and haven’t read all of it yet. ACK I hae about 10 books read half way….
I am totally blanking on the dress of the time, would she show @ 5 months? I admit it was something I kept thinking about. But I did love she went after him to tell him. I just didn’t get why she didn’t SAY SOMETHING when she found him. But I haven’t finished the book yet.
Do plan to…
I’ll confess it – I got this one based on the cover. I didn’t realize it was a sequel to The Rebel and The Lady which I couldn’t get into at all. So if you only give this one a C- I’m thinking this one won’t work either. But dang it’s a gorgeous cover. I got get past the shallowness that sucks me in so often.
Sybil: I found her reasoning for not spilling the beans the moment she lays eyes on him pretty weak. You’ll have to let me know what you think when you finish it. Good question about the clothing. I wondered the same thing, but couldn’t be arsed to do some research.
KristieJ: The only reason I kept reading was because of my massive love for The Rebel And The Lady. Otherwise, this probably would have ended up being a DNF – with a quick skim thru the last chapter. Major bummer.
So disappointed in this one.