jacey: (blue eyes)
jacey ([personal profile] jacey) wrote2016-08-22 05:58 am

Book Log 56/2016 - Allison Butler: The Healer - Borderland Brides #1

HealerDid the fashion for sexy men in kilts begin with Outlander or was there an earlier trend that I missed? (Disclaimer: I’ve never had a thing about men in kilts!) Well, this is one of those sexy men in kilts books, but for all that it’s engaging and a quick, light read.

Lynelle is an outcast in her own family home just south of the Scottish border (in the days when the border was somewhat flexible and border raids were de rigeur). She’s been rejected by her father and stepmother and has been brought up by the local healer (now deceased). When her half-brother is kidnapped by a Scottish raiding party from just over the border, Lynelle sets out to rescue him, not so much out of love for the boy, but because she wants to prove herself to her father. She exaggerates her healing skills – learned but little practised. In a trade (two weeks of her time in return for the release of the boy) she’s sent along to Closeburn with Laird William Kirkpatrick to tend his injured brother. William is shy of healers, having banished one from Closeburn for failing to save various members of his family.

Of course Lynelle falls for the brooding William (rather too easily, maybe) and you can probably more-or-less guess the rest. It’s a fun, light read and there are no great surprises in the ending, but it satisfies the story.

Just for the record, I hate historical romance covers that have headless bare six-packs on the cover. At least this one has a headless bare back.

Note: Review copy provided by netgalley

[identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com 2016-08-22 01:30 pm (UTC)(link)
I think it began with Lymond, to which Outlander read (to me) like fanfic.

[identity profile] birdsedge.livejournal.com 2016-08-22 09:34 pm (UTC)(link)
I read the first Lymond a few years ago after it was recommended by a friend. I wasn't all that taken with it - at least, not enough to try the second. Maybe one day I'll get round to reading more.

[identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com 2016-08-22 09:41 pm (UTC)(link)
I think the last three are the best, but Outlander (to me) picked up on various bits of the third book, as did a great deal of fanfic, and filed the serial numbers off, then set a modern girl in it--which was a very, very common frame for fic back in the sixties.