Where to start.
This book starts in the present and then the story itself is a memory of the falling in love of the two characters. This type of narrative worked in Wurthering Heights, not so here. I simply didn't like it.
And here is the crux of the problem, there were too many things which I simply didn't like.
Daniel is 'new' money on the hunt for a bride with the right pedigree, enter the heroine who is trying to break free from her blue blood Boston family tradition and she's studying medicine. Daniel is arrogant, pushy, rude, presumptuous... I could go on. Anna is sweet, but for a girl who's had to stand up to her family and insist on becoming a doctor in a time when it was not very common, she's remarkably spineless when it comes to Daniel. Oh, I'm all for a girl getting flutters and feeling excited in the presence of a handsome man, but seriously, she is a door mat.
Possibly my biggest beef is that to prove that Anna is sweet and innocent the author has her saying no a lot to Daniel, and then Daniel completely and utterly ignores what she says to the point where it starts feeling a bit creepy. I was feeling uncomfortable when on a date at his mansion things start to heat up and he's trying to take her blouse off. Anna manages to keep it on and says something like yes she finds him attractive, but she's not sure that she wants to go down that road with him. His response? He's sure he does, so why doesn't she just trust him and go along with it?
Okkkkaaaaayyyyy. This is where I lost all interest. I know that he didn't 'seduce' her after she says no again, but that is not the point. As a reader you always put yourself in the shoes of the hero/heroine, and if I'd been Anna and some great lout was trying to fondle my breasts and was 'trust me, you'll be so much happier afterwards' I would have gotten a hold of the nearest heavy object to hand and beaten him over the head with it. Not because I was in fear of being raped (oh, sorry, I meant seduced), but because I'd expect any REAL man to take my answer of no to mean NO, and an answer of I'm not sure to also mean NO or at least NOT NOW. Clearly the author and I don't see eye to eye on this, which is ok. She's a very successful writer and there's obviously a host of women who are ok reading about possible abusive relationships masquerading as romances.
Would I seek out one of the author's other 200 odd books? Maybe if one caught my eye in a charity shop in the 20p rack, for all I've said, the writing was good. But if that book turned out to be along the same lines then that would be it.
I realise that this book has lots of 5* ratings...sorry people, not my kinda relationship. Ditto to the author.