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St. Germains #1

Wrap Me in Splendor

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Wrap Me in Splendor

Hardcover

First published January 1, 1983

43 people want to read

About the author

Ellen Tanner Marsh

31 books29 followers
Even though Ellen was born in Germany, she was raised in New Jersey (insert Jersey joke here). That’s probably why she suffered extreme culture shock when her family moved to South Carolina when she was sixteen.

After all, it's hard to be uprooted from a pretty colonial town, say goodbye to lifelong friends, and be dragged 800 miles south by your parents. Ellen freely admits that the transformation from Jersey Girl to Southern Belle was a rocky one.

But steeped in history, the Lowcountry of South Carolina is the perfect place for a writer to live, because Charleston’s gorgeous historic houses, cobblestone streets, and moss-draped gardens serve as the ultimate “romance laboratory.”

So 40 years later has Ellen acclimated to living here? "Heck yeah, y’all."


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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Christina ~ Brunette Reader.
187 reviews359 followers
dnf
October 21, 2021

No rating, DNF at p. 35

I’m not generally a fan of vintage bodice rippers, but once in a while I pick one up as I’ve appreciated in the past their often lush and varied settings and storylines, always hoping to find that rare gem that might also suit my “modern” Historical Romance (the ones published from the 1990s onward, so to speak) reader’s tastes.
Some of these old-school romances have aged well for me, most haven’t... Wrap Me in Splendor belongs to the latter category, from verbose and adjectives-packed descriptions galore to sparse and stilted dialogues. I don’t need to be reminded every other paragraph that the heroine’s sloping eyes are topaz/golden in colour and that they are sloping of course, that she has a small and pointed face, that everything about her is dainty and that her waist is tiny.
And then this, after she and the hero have met for a couple of minutes of unwanted groping:
”Be still [...] Your words mean nothing to me. Your body tells me all I want to know.”
I really don’t feel like facing the eye-rolling misery wading through 500 pages of such drivel would inspire in me, sorry.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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