Books
Barbara Cartland

Love And The Gods

The young and handsome Duke of Barenlock is twenty-seven and is being constantly pestered by his mother and his family to get married.
They are not only frightened he will not produce an heir to the Dukedom, but the Castle, one of the most famous in Scotland, is in desperate need of repair.
The Duke’s cousin Moira introduces him to an attractive American girl, Mary-Lee, who is an immensely rich heiress.
Moira tries to pressure him into proposing to Mary-Lee, but he is idealistic enough to hope that one day he will fall in love with someone who will love him not for his title but for himself.
To escape the pressure he goes for a walk by his river, which he shares with his Clans’ arch-enemies, the MacFallins.
He sees a poacher in the shape of a young girl fishing his water and he is just about to order her off when she hooks a salmon and he cannot resist netting it for her.
It is her first salmon and she is so delighted that he finds it hard to tell her she has no right to it and he then discovers that she, Sheinna, is the daughter of the dreaded Chieftain of the MacFallins.
They agree to meet the following morning at the same place and Sheinna tells him that her father is forcing her to marry Sir Ewen Kincard, who is over seventy with a terrible reputation.
How the Duke and Sheinna find a way together to resolve their problems and bring their Clans together, and how after severe danger they find real love for themselves is told in this exciting and stirring story of Scotland by BARBARA CARTLAND.
147 printed pages
Copyright owner
Barbara Cartland Ebooks Ltd.
Original publication
2012
Publication year
2011

Other versions

Have you already read it? How did you like it?
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Impressions

  • lovely smartshared an impression5 years ago
    👍Worth reading

    But you must marry sooner or later and you must marry money.”

    The Dowager Duchess spoke up with a determined note in her voice that her son recognised only too well.

    The Duke of Barenlock walked to the window and looked out at the sea

  • fatimahj07shared an impression6 years ago

    Lol ok, I love romance novels but really...this one had a "heroine" who sounded like a dull twit. One wonders if Cartland enjoyed writing her female characters short of everything, including articulation, common sense, self-esteem. I've been reading her books on and off for 26 years and I'm literally in shock. There's a distinct pattern she follows (most serial novelists do) which degrades the key female character at every turn.

  • ORhoda Esmeralda Bockshared an impression4 years ago
    💧Soppy

Quotes

  • fatimahj07has quoted6 years ago
    “Tell me about them, please tell me about them,” Sheinna begged him. “If I was a man, I would try to climb them, but as I am a woman I must be content to kneel at their feet and look up at them.”
  • fatimahj07has quoted6 years ago
    At the moment there was only a hut there containing the heads of lions he had killed in India, the first stag he had shot as a small boy and of course his first salmon.
  • Corrine Marreelhas quoted7 years ago
    anything,” Sheinna begged. “I am really

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