This is one of those books that had such promise, if not for one key factor - the heroine who couldn't stop being a disagreeable, rude, obnoxious, immature wretch of a person. Indeed, I was thinking that the "Shaw Wretch" might actually refer to her until I looked back at the title, and I realized that nope, the lovely, pleasant, considerate, kind hero was supposed to be the wretch in this tale. At least, according to rumor, since it was the people around him who referred to him as such. I never was able to figure out why with great detail, because I had to stop reading after 50% for the sake of my blood pressure.
The book opens with a scene a la Titanic, with the heroine perched on the precipice of a wall overlooking the loch, and the hero comes upon her, insisting she come down or he would jump in with her. I swooned internally, thinking this was a very promising start to the relationship. Sadly, I was very, very wrong. The heroine soon learns she is to be sent off to be a nun, considering she is unmarriageable due to what appears to be scoliosis. She is, naturally, disinclined to submit to such a future, and she begins to think about living in hiding as a man, finding work, etc. The hero is to escort her to where is to live as a nun, and quite quickly things turn sour. Our heroine, Jory, first tries to trick him out of the dowry she is sure he is carrying, leaving him naked, without his horse, in the middle of the forest. She races away, only for her horse to throw a shoe, and our hero, Finlay, must then rescue her. Despite her causing him such grief, he actually gives her a full body massage when they arrive at the cabin. The story progresses with similar actions - Jory does or says something awful, Finlay takes it like the absolute doormat that he is and waits on her hand and foot. Jory feels some shame for a fraction of a second before shrugging off her humanity and doing something crappy all over again. I felt like I was reading a YA book...until we got to Jory suddenly feeling desire for Finlay and masturbating in bed with Finlay asleep on the FLOOR beside her. Because heaven forbid she allow him to sleep on the bed, after all she has put him through. And did I mention she hates all men? She says it quite frequently, and despite Finlay giving her no reason to fear him, she constantly reacts as if he's this monster who is going to hurt her in retaliation for all she keeps doing, despite the fact that he has been the soul of kindness the whole time.
I saw zero chemistry between the pair, even when I was hoping Jory would appreciate all that Finlay was doing for her. He even got her shoes with LIFTS, to help with her pain, and still - he was not worth her kindness or consideration. I don't need to read about that kind of heroine getting a happy ending. No, thank you.
**I received a free copy from NetGalley and this is my honest review.**