Reluctantly working at her father's tavern which is frequented by loutish sailors, early 1800s teen Rosie finds herself without a family or livelihood after a brawl ends her father's life and she is taken in by young sea captain Raider Lyons
This author is not afraid to tackle difficult subjects: living with a deaf parent (Of Sound Mind), facing the consequences of a criminal act (Bad), or questioning one's sexuality (Eight Seconds). But Jean Ferris is also adept at writing comedy, historical fiction, and romance. What's most interesting is that she didn't publish her first novel until she was in her mid-40s. Yet she's never forgotten the intense feelings and changes of her own teenage years. Critics as well as teen readers have seen the evidence of that in her writing and have honored her novels with a number of awards, from Best Books for Young Adults to various state and National Book Award nominations.
I read this series when I was young and fell in love with them (and Raider.) Its a wonderful story full of adventure and romance. When I would read them I completely got sucked into the books, time would fly by and I would be so sad when it was over. Ferris' descriptions are captivating. I still have my copy of the series I keep in my hope chest so my kids won't damage them, and every once in a while I pull them out to read. For a middle school/junior high aged girl, they are wonderful!
I bought this series in jr. high and it has been one of my favorites ever since. Every few years I pull it out and read it again. I won't claim that it's a classic or that it even is particularly well written, I just love the story and the characters. Each book is only about 200 pages so you could read all three in a day or two, another reason why I like them. :) My favorite is the second book, just in case you were wondering.
Going down memory lane here... I read these as a teen and adored them. These books inspired an attempt for me to write historical fiction that went horribly wrong when I was 15 or 16. I'll stick to reading other's historical fiction I think. ;)
I found this series in my middle school library and fell in love with these characters. I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve read these books. Over twenty years later, I still think of them and occasionally reread them every few years — I have no doubt I’ll carry them with me forever.
I’m not sure why they were divided into three short books, when I think they really make sense to be one average-length book.
Upon rereading as an adult, I’m in disbelief that Rosie spent as much time as she did in the brig with Rip and neither of them ever mentioned Raider, Octavia, Tuti, etc., by name during their long conversations… oh well, I suspend disbelief.
We read all books in the trilogy and reviewed them together. This review is also available at Song of the Sea and Weather the Storm, and our full review can be read at The Smut Report.
Heat Factor: Entry Level Hotness.
Character Chemistry: Immediate and dreamy.
Plot: Epic adventure of self-discovery… and romance… on the high seas.
Overall: True love lasts a lifetime.
This was the romance series that hooked Erin and Ingrid on the genre, back in 1999. Holly had never read it. Time for a buddy read—and a wide-ranging discussion about pirates, young adult romance, and what gives us butterflies. Our podcast and show notes can be found at The Smut Report.
Heat Factor: A teensy bit of closed door hanky panky after they get married in Book 3
Character Chemistry: Butterflies in my stomach
Plot: Rosie gets kidnapped, like, 7 times, but on the way she finds a community who cares for her
Overall: It might not be as good without the nostalgia factor, but it’s still a solid YA romance
I can't believe this is by the same author as the Marigold books. Wow! I loved this, but am sad it's part of a 3 part set because I got it through inter-library loan and am not sure I'm ambitious enough to get the other two. It was a fun pirate-y, coming of age-y, adventure-y, romance-y kind of book.
I read this series growing up and since this quarantine has closed my library, I’m rereading all my favorites. Rosie and Raider were the first couple I really admired and I still find their story interesting and romantic. It’s highly readable and I read the entire series in a single afternoon.
3.5. Extremely my shit. I didn't know it was part of a series and I need to find the sequel so I can know what happens. (I mean, I know what's gonna happen, but I still want to read it.)
This book was ok, but not good. It had some potential (the time period and setting are especially fascinating to me). The characters weren't allowed enough time to develop (except maybe the main character), but that's probably because the author was given strict limits. I will go ahead and try the second book out of curiosity.
A huge complaint is the paperback cover. Who were those people? The woman on the cover didn't look at all like the main character was described. I will chalk it up to limited budget and stock paintings. That doesn't mean it didn't effect my enjoyment of the book.
This is one of my favorite series. I discovered it at the library when I was pretty young (probably pre-middle school) and have been reading it almost yearly since then. I love the time period, the characters, the swashbuckling adventure...
Great book, though I was really disappointed that the main character, Rosie, has black hair not red. I like the girl on the cover and imagine Rosie that way.
This is my favorite book (and series) in the world! I think it's out of print. If you love pirates, a great romance, a clean read with great characters and intrigue, this is for you. It is FANTASTIC!