Photo de l'auteur

Michelle Conder

Auteur de Duty at What Cost?

32 oeuvres 202 utilisateurs 6 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Michelle Conder

Duty at What Cost? (2013) 21 exemplaires
Socialite's Gamble (2014) 20 exemplaires
The Most Expensive Lie of All (2013) 14 exemplaires
Prince Nadir's Secret Heir (2015) 14 exemplaires
Living the Charade (2013) 13 exemplaires
Russian's Ruthless Demand (2015) 12 exemplaires
His Last Chance at Redemption (2012) 12 exemplaires
Defying the Billionaire's Command (2016) 11 exemplaires
Crowning His Unlikely Princess (2020) 6 exemplaires
Bound to Her Desert Captor (2018) 5 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
female
Nationalité
Australia
Lieux de résidence
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Courte biographie
After graduating from the University of Melbourne, Michelle Conder took a variety of jobs before packing her bags and traveling and working overseas. When none of the career opportunities she encountered grabbed her she returned to Australia, and after more study decided to follow her lifelong dream of becoming a writer.

Michelle now lives in Melbourne with her husband and three children; when she isn't writing, she loves to visit faraway places and spend time with her family and friends.

Membres

Critiques

Okay but not riveting as witnessed by the fact that I read half of it then put it down for two weeks before I picked it back up and finished it. I guess mainly the hero and heroine were just too nice and the hero was not an ass at all. Not very crazy for a Harlequin Presents. And that’s why I read them, for the crazy.
 
Signalé
Luziadovalongo | Jul 14, 2022 |
Typical storyline for this title. Secret baby, emotionally stunted hero who doesn't believe in love.
Eastern style.
It's okay, not particularly original, in fact, I thought I'd read it before but it was a different book very similar.
 
Signalé
izzied | Oct 29, 2020 |
Review Posted on HarlequinJunkie.com

Ava had to attend the wedding of her ex-fiancee. It wasn’t a hardship – she and Gilles had been friends all their lives and they’d never really had a relationship. It was just assumed they’d marry someday, but he found someone to love – and that meant Ava had to pretend she was putting on a brave face, even if she was secretly thrilled for her old friend. If she had to be completely truthful, she was also a little jealous that he’d found the thing she never had. True love. Read More… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Aleveria | Jan 12, 2017 |
In hopes of rehabilitating her wild child reputation, Cara Chatsfield promises her family that she'll play hostess for a big gambling event at their Las Vegas casino. There, a man literally runs in to her so hard that he breaks her heels, says it was her own fault, and then when she tries to protest, offers her $50 and calls her a hooker. Her love interest, ladies and gentlemen! In the time honored tradition of terrible romance novels, he continues to find the most absurdly unlikely explanations for her behavior in order to think the worst of her in every situation. Every time she smiles, she's a conniving whore. Every time she protests, she's a ball-breaker. Every time she cries, she's trying to manipulate him. It's deeply annoying retrograde idiocy. Anyway, stupid contrivances get them to a vacation in Fiji together and they fall in love over the course of about two days. The end!

So dumb. Just, so dumb. Aiden's POV is a deeply troubling one, as he's such a misogynist that he sounds like he's about three seconds away from murdering women a la Jack the Ripper any minute, and Cara is implausibly naive and unable to care for herself. Either of them would be terrible in any relationship, let alone a relationship with each other.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
wealhtheowwylfing | 1 autre critique | Feb 29, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
32
Membres
202
Popularité
#109,082
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
6
ISBN
132
Langues
2

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