Sabrina Eversleigh runs away from home after her new brother-in-law attempts to rape her. She would surely have died in a blizzard if Phillip Mercerault had not rescued her. He nurses her back to health only to find that he is not a hero. Instead, he's a gentleman who has compromised a lady. Now, there's only one thing left for him to do — marry her.
But Sabrina turns him down, leaving him completely baffled. However, things don't turn out quite the way Sabrina planned, and it is she, then, who must propose, sweetening the pot with a big dowry and an offer of freedom for Phillip. But what's a husband to do when he knows his bride is afraid of men? And more important, what is the bride to do when she follows her husband to his mistress' lodgings and discovers him on the point of indulging?
Phillip and Sabrina have a long way to go before they can sit amicably at the same table together.
Very strange story. Up until the wedding it is quite good and I was absorbed in it. But then the hero and the heroine both become terminally stupid and seem to lose all their ability to think things through rationally. The heroine becomes just about insufferable in her behaviour, especially towards the hero, who had, after all, saved her life and her reputation. The story ends abruptly, without the hero and heroine really coming together and resolving their situation or their feelings towards one another, and there are several loose ends left over, like the sister and her husband and the comeuppance that they deserve (which they don't get). Also very strange love/sex scenes - there are three of them, but nothing, barely a kiss on the very last page of the book, between the hero and heroine.
The version of the book that I read was the original one published in 1981 under the title "An Honorable Offer". Apparently Coulter has extensively rewritten the book and republished it as "The Offer".
1 1/2 stars! X. I wanted to like this book, I really did. I mean it STARTED off really good! I liked all the characters and the plot seemed solid and a little wicked........That is, UNTIL Sabrina got to London and subsequently agrees to marry Phillip. I gotta know: WTF happened to the Phillip from the beginning of the story?? WHO is this absolute douchebag he morphed into? It’s like another character invaded his body once they arrived in London. He made me sick!! The whole mistress dealio was gross and disgusted me how he was essentially bed hopping from his mistress to Sabrina. I hope he took a fking bath in between, doubt it though. ::vomit:: GROSS, misogynist, pig of a man. Sabrina shoulda married Richard. Additionally, Sabrina began as a solid character with a mind of her own. Suddenly SHE morphed into this brainless, zombie-twit doing whatever Phillip wanted! :facepalm: THEN Trevor the rapist bro-in-law just fell back with some mild threats.....he seemed like a formidable villain in the beginning. But ended up just fizzling out completely along with her horrible sister. SO much more could’ve even done with those two as villains.... The few sex scenes were lackluster, boring and frankly unacceptable. Sweet baby jebus, no wonder Sabrina couldn’t get off....Good ol’ Phillip was a bastard of a husband and Sabrina even tells you as she is losing her v-card that he smelled like his mistress!! ::vomit, vomit:: He prolly still tasted like her too! ::so much vomit, again:: I’d like to throw in randomly: If I had to hear anout how skinny Sabrina was and about the “cook” at Dimwhit making everyone too fat ONE more damn time....::eyeroll:: SOO annoying how much this was repeated!!
The ending was incredibly rushed, dumb and childish. Everyone eating the cook at Dimwhit tarts or whatever like their made of crack and throwing them at each other??? Weird. Racing cats thrown in too at the ass end....uh, ok. (Yes, ik this ties into another book). Really; Sabrina forgave his dumbass too quickly and the whole “mistress” dealio that she had such issue with, was never resolved. It just ended with promises of love and blah blah blah but we ALL know his ass still keeping that mistress. Food for though: Sabrina had her own money....a shitty family (besides grandpa)...WHY didn’t she book a ship to America or somewhere and set off for a new life of her own with no bs censor from what are clearly a bunch of idiots?!
IDK, was there like two stories entangled in this novel? Invasion of the London body snatchers? I just don’t get how these characters started out so well and took a sharp change into totally different (awful) people.
Bottom line: Ima burn my copy of this book in my fireplace. Just so I don’t have to donate it to goodwill and some poor sucker will buy it for a $1 and be just as confused & disappointed as me. It’s a service, really.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This review is done for the older 1981 version, I have yet to read the rewritten version to see how they differ.
Sabrina (h) has grown up much loved by her grandfather, the Earl of Monmouth. Even though her parents had died when she was young , she had a happy childhood. It wasn't until her older sister Elisabeth married their cousin and heir to Monmouth that things changed for the worse. After her sister's husband ,Trevor, tries to rape her she goes to Elisabeth for help. That is when she learns of her sisters hatred for her and that she will be of no help to her. With her grandfather's declining health there was no other option for her but to run away and go to her Aunts house in London. Unfortunately there was a blizzard that ends her journey before it really ever got started.
Phillip (H) has been burned by women in the past and now knows exactly what they are and what they are for. For years now he's had the reputation as being one of the worst Rakes around. He's now on his way to a friends house party in the country , part due to his friends bad directions and the blizzard, he finds himself lost in the forest. As he makes his way through the forest he finds a young woman unconscious and barely clinging to life. As he remembers passing a hunting box (house) not too far back he decides to take her there and try to save her.
Save her he does but when it is discovered that she has spent 5 days alone with the worst rake in London nothing can save her reputation so they are forced to wed.
I really liked this book, and I found that it wasn't really like most of the older Catherine Coulter bodice rippers that I had read before. Philip is a rake of the worst order of course but he had enough honor and a certain code of ethics to prevent him from taking advantage of his young charge. He nurses her back to health, learns about what made her runaway in the first place and all he really wants to do is protect her. *****SPOILERS*************************************************************************************
It is Sabrina the states that she doesn't a real marriage, that she wants a marriage of convenience and that Philip can have his "freedom". So he does continue to see his mistress and the only sex scene in this book is with the mistress. When I think about what CC might have taken out of the rewrite it is probably the scene with the riding crop. It's a pretty harsh scene but I feel it fits with the story and the time period. Also for those who like a good grovel at the end, there isn't one but really what did he have to grovel for..she was the one who insisted that he kept his mistress. He did apologies for being out of control with the riding crop however and he tended her wounds himself.
I read the original 1981 publication. It was… interesting.
It opens with the heroine’s BIL attempting to “force himself on her.” Her evil sister doesn’t care so she runs away. The hero saves her life. She’s compromised.
The heroine behaves irrationally and passive aggressive, saying one thing but meaning another, this leads to confusion, like insisting on a marriage of convenience, in name only, and that he’s free to do as he likes but then flipping out over his mistress. This is all in the blurb on the back of the book.
At one point, she tries to whip him with a riding crop but he takes it away and spanks her with it leading to welts. Gross.
Another weird thing, the only sex scenes were the attempted rape, the BIL tupping a maid, and the hero with his mistress. Like most signets, it ends when they decide to love each other. They don’t kiss until the last page.
I don't know why the H finally admits her loves the h in this one he's a pretty big dick in it after they get married but they do have CAT RACING in this book which as the owner of lots of cats in my life find hard to fathom as possible. My cat would literally lay down and fall asleep or yell at me for food so I gave this 3 stars just for the cat racing which was so totally left field in this one it really didn't even fit in the story just random cat racing thrown in 🤔
a charming man rescues a MUCH younger woman from a blizzard and nurses her back to health in a cabin.
with features such as:
a vivid scene of attempted rape in the first chapter, cat slut shaming, joking about beating and murdering an unconscious 18 year old, and the concept that men are uncontrollably animals (but don’t worry, it’s charming)
This book could have - SHOULD HAVE - been so much better if our heroine had simply kept her backbone. I HATED that she would cower like a wimp whenever she finally got the nerve to speak her true feelings. And not only was that disappointing to me, but it was even worse that after she kneed her sorry excuse of a husband in the groin but she then APOLOGIZE for it! I mean, c'mon - he was standing in his tart's bedroom, with said tart posed on the bed, fully nude - the bedroom of a home he was STILL paying for (must note that the plaster was just redone over the bed and the bill for it was sent to his marital home by the skank!) - and she APOLOGIZED! Argh!!!!!
Never him or his tart apologizing (SHE HAPPILY STOLE THAT POOR GIRLS WEDDING NIGHT, FFS!!). Just the poor, sad, pathetic wife apologizes even when THEY should have done so!
Each time I've read this story I have prayed that Ms Coulter does a rewrite on it to make our pathetic heroine a person we could be proud of: a steel-backbone, making them grovel for forgiveness, and she brazenly rounds up her Ton friends and, with them, scares all their men into being faithful... and they all pitch in to purchase one-way tickets to Japan for all the tarts stinking up London... AND stand on the decks with their men, waving bye-bye to them all. I'm sure the tarts would find a seedy brothel in Japan (Paris is too close) to work at - they'd love it! LOL
Honestly, I'd love to have had Martine get her comeuppance. Her stupid head-nodding during Sabrina's breakdown just made me want to reach in an deck her one - hard. Martine needed to disappear... why oh why did Jack the Ripper have to disappear? (Yes, I hate her THAT much!!)
And I wish she had made Phillip beg even harder - and called him out on being "about to tell her it was over" when he was clearly undressing and laughing with the tart. Please. Sell that to someone dumb enough to buy it! I hope Sabrina sold Martine's house, without permission from either the douche or the tart... and all contents were sent to Sabrina to go through before GIVING the rest to a local brothel - for free! LMAO! REVENGE OF A WOMAN SCORNED! Martine-the-Tart-Queen deserves it just for stealing Sabrina's wedding night!
Possibly the worst book I have ever read to date..terrible writing, terrible plotting, terrible characters. I only actually finished this out of sheer curiosity to determine if this was actually and truly supposed to be a romance because up through 90% of the book the hero was still cheating on the heroine and acting like an ass and the hero was terrible at sex (?!?). My curiosity got the best of me to see what the author could possibly do to redeem this as a romance. Answer: she did nothing. Utter crap. Thankfully I didn't buy it.
I have always loved Catherine Coulter’s audiobooks. A part always makes me cringe but I love the stories and especially the endings. This was no exception.
Ugh, barely made it through this book. It started out pretty good...Sabrina flees some horrid family members and nearly dies in a snowstorm. But oh, here comes Phillip to save the day! Kind and noble Phillip, who nurses her back to health, and doesn't even attempt to seduce her, even if she is beautiful and naked. What a swell guy, right?
WRONG! Somewhere along the way, Phillip becomes the world's biggest asshole. It was as if the writer put down her pen, and let someone else write the second half of the story because Phillip totally changed...and not for the better. I don't care what the reasoning is: abandoning your bride on your wedding night to go screw your mistress is TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE! I really should have stopped reading right there, but I naively thought he would realize how empty and hollow having a mistress was, when he had a beautiful, vibrant wife back home. But nope, the bonehead remained clueless, and not only continued to maintain his mistress, but had zero qualms about it, essentially throwing it in Sabrina's face.....despite the fact that she told him she loved him (even after he selfishly screwed her and gave nothing back in return). And on top of all of this, he was absolutely ridiculous and impossible to please. One minute he was complaining that Sabrina was too compliant and lacked passion, and then when she showed passion, he would bitch at her about it. There was nothing she could do to make him happy. He didn't deserve a wife, or a family, or that damn racing cat that he got at the end. He deserved a good beating from Clarendon, because I might have hated him more than the evil wannabe-rapist, Trevor.
I've read a lot of books, and I love me a good jackass-hero, but Phillip was just a jackass. He had no redeeming qualities, and honestly, I think he is probably the worst "hero" in a book that I've ever read (at least any that I can think of). I spent 75% of the book wanting to punch him in his freakin face.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This isn't my type of book. This book is unsatisfying, a torture to endure, and full of lies. I always think I can read an adult book, but most of the time all that means is explicit garbage. I won't read unless there is a story worth reading. I only read about 22% of this book. The men characters are completely off. All 3 of the (sexually active) men that have been introduced are inconsistent or unrealistic in some way. It annoys me and I am not entertained by being lied to. If more men read this crap, maybe some of these lies could be dispelled or changed. But obviously some people like to believe in lies.
I do not like the narration and spastic POV changes of the story. Maybe I should have started with book 1. And maybe I should not have assumed that a book cover with people clothed, wasn't a bodice ripping story. Sex is not romance. I can't find a character to care about in this story. I am not a superficial reader, and this book has no depth. It has a lot of POV jumping, and a lot of choppy flashbacks or rememberances. If feels like a game the author is playing, and the reader is just being tortured. If that is the kind of book you like then this one's for you.
Sex isn't a game. It isn't just entertainment. The characters in this book have negative views of sex and marriage in general I belive in love, and honor, and respect, and goodness, and trust, and family, and marriage. I won't read a book that devalues those things for entertainment sake. I already read some reviews that were unhappy with the ending. This book seems to be mostly about people who aren't married having sex, and describing it in great detail. I don't see the value with continuing to read on.
THE OFFER BLURB: When her new brother-in-law attempted to rape her, Sabrina Eversleigh ran away, and she would surely have died in a blizzard if Philip Mercerault had not rescued her. After he nurses her back to health, he learns that instead of being a hero, he has compromised the lady. There's only one honorable thing to do and that is to marry her. But she turns him down! Philip and Sabrina have a long way to go before they can sit at the same table together. After reading most of the reviews for this title I was a bit uncertain as to whether I should read it as based on the reviews this is suppose to be a terrible book. However I decided to be brave take the plunge and read it for myself. Well the long and short of it is that I am glad I did. REVIEW I enjoyed reading this book. I found it quite humorous and entertaining. The plot was developed and I found the characters to be quite entertaining. It had me turning the pages as I was quite eager to discover what was going to happen next.My only disappointment is the ending. I felt that it was rushed and could have been better developed and for that it lost one star.
I don't usually write a review for books I didn't enjoy but this book is so much of a mess I decided to write a short one just to warn others off this book.
The setting of the era was superfluous at best, only the mentions of Almack's pointed to Regency era, otherwise it could have been set up whenever.
Characters were flat, villains coming and going as needed and there was no explanation on how the Martine thing was resolved. I suppose the author thought the H and h saying Iwuvyu to each other in the end will keep the reader happy and forgot other parts unfortunately it wasn't enough since there were so many things left dangling.
And to think I paid for this book a bit more than I did other books. Makes me mad just seeing the cover.
Note: I read the kindle version and I don't know how much it differed from the 1981 version.
After the attempted rape by her new brother-in-law, Sabrina runs from home into a snowstorm and almost dies of exposure. Viscount Derencourt, also lost in the storm, rescues her and they are trapped in the blizzard for several days. Sabrina attempts to defy society after she has been ‘compromised’ rejecting Phillip’s offer of marriage. When her family refuses to believe her and society rejects her, she finally agrees to marry Phillip. Now the chaos begins when two people, married under pressure, need to adjust to their relationship. Charming characters, good friends assisting, eventually result in HEA.
Readalikes: Janna MacGregor – The Bad Luck Bride; Jenna Jaxon – To Woo a Wicked Widow; Julia Quinn – Just Like Heaven; Annabelle Bryant – London’s Wicked Affair; Sarah MacLean – Nine Rules to Break when Romancina a Rake. Readalike authors: Elizabeth Lowell, Karen Robards, Julia Quinn.
Pace: Moderately paced Character: Most Likeable Storyline: Character-driven Writing style: Engaging; Banter Tone: Upbeat Frame: Regency England Themes: Marriage of convenience;
It started out great, well at the last the story between Sabrina and Philip. He was a gentleman, he took care of her, they had a great friendship. It was ok.
I didn't like the way the author spent so many pages describing Trevor's perversity: the way he tried to rape Sabrina, what he did with the maid Mary. Ironically, we had zilch sex between Sabrina and Philip, one or two sentences and that was it.
The 1st half was good, but then they got married and the story went wrong. Actually, it went wrong when Sabrina regained consciousness: She was apparently already in love with Philip so why did she refuse him when he propose the first time? And the second when they met in London? She was really immature and annoying! Philip was no better, he became a real ass after getting married, talking about wanting to keep his freedom and all.
2 stars, because even if annoying it was still entertaining!
This is another older book that was rewritten. It starts off pretty well; her brother-in-law almost rapes Sabrina and escapes into a snowstorm only to be rescued by Phillip, who takes care of her and returns her to a neighbor. In the nature of this time, she's compromised by being alone with him but turns down his honorable offer of marriage. Phillip seems more interested in his mistress anyway, so he doesn't much care until Sabrina decides she needs to marry him after all. It wasn't a great story. There's a lot of drama but most of it fizzles.
I can´t with this book. The way the hero acts... I know it was the way the "gentleman" of old society was supposed to be, but that doesn´t make it right. He hit Sabrina, was rude to her, and then suddenly he was all sorry... I don´t know. The writting was exquisite and the first half of the book was totally cute, but then the author decided to make an all manly hero and that´s when things just went downhill.
Of all the Catherine Coulter books I have read, I must say this one is my least favorite. Phillip is sweet, kind and helping when we first meet him as he rescues Sabrina. He turns into a total jerk once they get married. Sabrina is so sick when he first meets her, he doesn't see the feisty young lady she is. The ending is unrealistic,even if it does end happily ever after. It just doesn't make a lot of sense.
i loved this authors early historical novels and hated when she stopped writing them. I hope a whole new set of readers discover them. i bought this one on Bookbub but feel the others are priced to high when you can find for much less in other formats. Catherine is really a great author. Great fun read.
Just when I felt no romance could hold my attention to the end...I found this one. Filled with like able characters and.some nasty ones too; Catherine manages to tell a good story. Her skills in not dragging on and on kept my attention and interest. Well done indeed. Now I need to read the others.
It started out so-so and deteriorated rapidly. He was a jerkoff, she was dumb; I cant even say nieve. Then magically of course after treating her horribly, cheating on her, and not trying to fulfill her in bed, they profess undying love. She was so annoying. Actually both of them were like fingers on a chalkboard. But I had just had to finish to see the train wreck at the end.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Such a waste of three hours of my life... is it romantic for a husband to smack his wife around, go to his mistress on his wedding night and become indifferent after his failure in seducing his wife.... argh...
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Narrator: Anne Flosnik does a good job though she made the heroine sound like a little teenager. Very not what I was expecting from Miss Coulter. The dialogues were extremely childish. Did not see any feelings from either characters.
Catherine Coulter always entertains and has such likeable characters!! This is one of her usual good books!! You should read anything she writes from historical romance to current times!
Can't make up my mind what to rate this because I loved the build up and the conflict but Phillip's confession was meh. I love a good grovel and this didn't have that.