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The Importance of Being Alice

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
First in a new series!
From New York Times bestselling author Katie MacAlister comes a series about finding your own wonderland—through one roadblock at a time....

Nothing about Alice Wood’s life is normal right now. Her fiancé, Patrick, called off their wedding and relationship only days before their nonrefundable wedding trip. And though a luxurious European river cruise for one is just what she needs, it’s not what she gets....
Due to a horrible misunderstanding, Alice is now cramped in her “romantic” suite with one of Patrick’s friends. Instead of cruising along the Rhine, Main, and Danube rivers sipping champagne with the love of her life, she’s navigating the waters with a strange—yet mysteriously handsome—British aristocrat.
A baron of dubious wealth—and not-so-dubious debt—Elliot Ainslie is just looking forsome alone time to write the books that keep his large family afloat. But his stodgy, serious self is about to be sidetracked by a woman who seems to have jumped out of the pages of a fairy tale, one who is determined to shake up his life...and include him in her own happily ever after.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 3, 2014
      MacAlister’s first Ainslie Brothers contemporary is witty, charming, and erotically tender, although plagued with one subplot too many. Alice Wood’s aggravating fiancé, Patrick, dumps her right before a planned trip, and Alice bravely decides to go by herself. Unfortunately, she finds on arrival that she will not be alone on her romantic river cruise through Europe—Patrick gave away his ticket. Baron Elliott Ainslie, manager of his family’s estate, just wants a quiet place to write a book away from his 11 siblings, crumbling castle, and chaotic finances. But sharing a cabin and tour group with the vivacious and attractive Alice seems likely to distract him completely. MacAlister (You Slay Me) inexplicably throws in an espionage element that serves only to detract from the sparkling romance. Alice and Elliott are endearing, and the comedic potential of the situation is played to the hilt. This confection only rarely falls off the edge between silly and too silly; most of it is a treat.

    • Kirkus

      November 15, 2014
      The itinerary looks promising, but the excursions are disappointing in MacAlister's (Time Thief, 2013, etc.) contemporary romance set on a cruise ship-the first book in the Ainslie Brothers series.A broken engagement shouldn't stop Alice Wood from enjoying her honeymoon cruise by herself. Unfortunately, the ship is much smaller than it looked in the brochures, and when the groom gives away his ticket to a friend, Alice is stuck in very close quarters with Elliott Ainslie, the eighth baron of a crumbling English estate who somehow supports his eleven siblings with his career as a novelist and needs time alone to write. Their trip will take them along the Danube, Main and Rhine rivers and straight into the Port of Missed Opportunities. At a coffeehouse in Amsterdam that's known for serving marijuana, they don't inhale anything beyond secondhand smoke and then claim to have hangovers the next day. At a sex club in Germany, they check into a pirate-themed room but have to leave early when Elliott gets stuck in a torture device before he has a chance to experience the parrot-shaped nipple clamps. Whereas Alice charms with kooky dialogue-"Now you're my prisoner, Lord Hunkybuns"-Elliott sounds stilted with his flowery speeches ("I want to be with you for all the days that remain to me") and his questionable British accent ("A gull tried to eat my shoe earlier today. It was most amusing"). Even less convincing is Alice's theory that Elliott is a spy. Despite living inches away from Elliott's side of the cabin, Alice asks him very few questions about his supposed work. She doesn't have much evidence to go on until the other passengers finally reveal what's been happening right under her nose. But love prevails, and Elliott's brother Gunner should be the next in line to find a bride. A meandering plot detracts from a quirky, enjoyable voice.

      COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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