Margins
The Wallflower Trap book cover
The Wallflower Trap
2024
First Published
4.21
Average Rating
203
Number of Pages

Part of Series

Clean, Sweet Romance, 2nd corrected version Lady Mimolette Lindsey harbored a secret. Because of it, she turns down all dance requests, consigning herself to wallflower status. This only pours difficulties over the dire predicaments she faces. Her late father, the Earl of Bathmorris, had been an eccentric profligate who named all his children after cheeses and spent his fortune on fake antiquities. They were nearly out of funds. With her brother Edam still at Oxford, Mimolette must find husbands for her younger sisters, Treccia and Ovolina during this year’s Season. Unfortunately, they were no beauties, from a dubious family, and in need of a swift education in dancing and manners her father neglected to provide. There were many wallflowers this Season, like herself and her sisters, destined to never be asked to dance, with little hope of romance. Mimolette devised a devilish plan, organizing the wallflowers, creating the needed circumstances to garner dances and perhaps find husbands. Revenge for the passing snubs of coxcombs and bucks also figured in her schemes. Her stratagems were working too, until an obnoxiously arrogant Major Lord John Tremaine decided, as an amusing lark, to insert himself into their “game.” Or did he mean to spoil it altogether? Nine years of bloody war were over, leaving John Tremaine with nightmares and at loose ends. The second son of a marquis, he joined the cavalry, only to inherit a fine estate from a maiden aunt upon his return from France. Being set for life, with no direction since the cessation of hostilities, entertainment and carousing proved the most expedient attractions for forgetting the war. Crashing one of the first balls of the season, he spied a mysterious beauty sitting among a gaggle of ‘plain janes,’ and sought an introduction. His friends warned him off, claiming Lady Lindsey was dangerous. Whatever his goal, any introduction invariably led to dancing with one or more of those nature’s unfortunates who gathered around the lady. His friends claimed it was sorcery. The forewarning only piqued Tremaine’s interest, the most intriguing hum he’d come across since coming home. He fenagled an introduction, though he had to bribe his best friend to approach the lady. He grinned, anticipating the fun he would have uncovering this incognita’s machinations.

Avg Rating
4.21
Number of Ratings
24
5 STARS
63%
4 STARS
17%
3 STARS
8%
2 STARS
4%
1 STARS
8%
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Author

B.W. Haggart
B.W. Haggart
Author · 4 books

I started writing historical romances on a dare. One day I couldn't find anything new to read and Joy, the love of my life, suggested a romance, Jude Deveraux's The Princess. I enjoyed it and started reading more. I realized that most of the SF, comedy, Historicals, and mystery books I liked had a romance in them: the Dorsai series, the four volume Man of his Word fantasy series, The Sebasitan St. Cyr series, The Dog Tails, even P.G.Woodhouse's Leave it to Psmith and Richard Powell's comedy Don Quixote, U.S.A. I have been a Napoleonic enthusiast since I was young, so the Regency period appealed to me. I read a few excruciatingly bad romances, amazed that they'd been published. So one day, I said, "I can write better than this" as I flung one such book in the trash. Joy gave me that look of hers. "So, why don't you?" The rest is history...romances. I found the Romance genre quite a challenge. I discovered there is a lot more to them than flowery words and kissing. Who knew? I chose the time travel romances because it allows me to show the contrasts between time periods in a way a straight-forward historical can't. So much of a period's culture is common knowledge and often unconscious. No one would think to describe or discuss universally shared beliefs and conventions. It's rather unnatural to have characters discuss such things.It is hard to avoid information dumps. But put some one in that culture from another time and contrasts and culture shock ensue. I find it a lot of fun, though I enjoy writing ‘straight’ historical and contemporary romances too. I also chose time travel stories because of a personal frustration of mine. In too many novels, the time traveler realizes they have traveled in time one page after it happens and accepts the fact in the next paragraph. I try for a more realistic approach to such an cataclysmic event. I write because it is fun, hard work to be sure, but enjoyable. My wife provides a lot of inspiration. My goal is a simple one: Provide an entertaining reading experience.

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