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390 pages, Paperback
First published September 16, 2018


"There is no one way to fall in love. It may scar you, make its mark, but that fall, that impact, is different for everyone."
Bloody hell. I think I’m in love with my boss. A king. And there’s nothing I can do to stop it.
She’s not just a nanny. She’s Aurora. She’s my reckoning and savior all at once. She’s her namesake, those northern lights that brighten the darkest winter skies. She’s my homecoming.
“I am a king. And I belong to you in ways I never thought possible. More than I belong to my country, more than I belong to the people, I belong to you.”


“I have a home in your heart and a love that won’t stop bleeding. I need you in my life, you are my life, you are my sun that I’ve waited too many winters for.”
Love requires bravery.A sweet, low angst fairy tale with likable main characters, adorable kids, and a pet pig!
It was a tense, cold kind of attractiveness, like his face and body and spirit were forged in steel and you might turn to stone if you looked at him too long....hires nice young woman...
"You're full of light and energy and this house has been ensconced in darkness."...as his daughters' nanny. You can guess the rest. :-)
"I've waited forty years for my heart to have a home," he says softly. "I've waited for you."And for a story that began so precariously perched on the edge of the cliché cliff, Ms. Halle did a really good job of not throwing Aksel and Aurora into the cheesy abyss.
I don't even know what I'm feeling most of the time, just that it's there and it's deep and raw and persistent and centered around him.I just thought that perhaps too much was revealed through internal monologue instead of through actual conversation. Plus, the conflict was resolved too easily.
I feel different in every way, like something inside me has been unlocked, a lock I'd been unsuccessfully trying to pick for a very long time.I recommend for those of you whose hearts are swayed by sweetness. :-)





“There is no one way to fall in love. It may scar you, make its mark, but that fall, that impact, is different for everyone.”
This book was on my tbr for such a long time that I just had to pick it up.
Aurora is a young nanny who moves to Copenhagen to take care of the two daughters of the King of Denmark, King Aksel, whose wife has recently been killed in an accident. We follow the progression of their relationship, as their aversion turns into a toe-curling romance.
There was a fourteen year span between the main characters that did not prevent me from enjoying the book. The spark between them was undeniable. Their chemistry was off the charts. Aksel was broody, moody and rude. Aurora had a backbone and marched to the beat of her own drums. She did not let him walk all over her and brought out the best in him.
Apart from the melodrama near the end of the story, I liked the fairytale-like ambiance and the angsty, slow burning romance.

She’s her namesake, those northern lights that brighten the darkest winter skies. She’s my homecoming. And I’m in love with her.

In moments like this, it feels like we’re unstoppable, immortal, like we’re at the center of a swirling universe, a god and a goddess, with the worlds at our feet. Nothing can touch us.

"You love me. I am home."
Tears spring to my eyes. "Home/"
He nods, just an inch, brow forever furrowed. "I've waited forty years for my heart to have a home,"... "I've waited for you."

