From Publishers Weekly
An unconventional heroine and a mystery about forged religious relics lend spice to this beguiling medieval romance from Delacroix, author of the Bride Quest series (The Beauty, etc.). Ysabella is an illiterate peasant living in near poverty with her sister and young brother. The family is reviled by the town for aspiring above its station-five years earlier, impetuous Ysabella married Merlyn Lammergeier, the lord of the manor, only to leave him in a fortnight. While the town assumes she's been cast off, the truth is she refused to live with a man who earned his fortune selling false relics to wealthy lords. Merlyn left Ravensmuir shortly thereafter but has now returned to reclaim his birthright and his bride. When he is attacked and left for dead, Ysabella agrees to play the grieving widow to help discover the assailant. Delacroix does a fine job of integrating historical detail into her plot; Ysabella's illiteracy, for example, is not merely mentioned, but used as a source of conflict between the couple. The story is told in the first person from Ysabella's point of view, which lends it an air of oral history, and the details of the relic trade are engrossing. Though a few plot twists are predictable, readers will treasure this rich and compulsively readable tale.Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Ysabella has chosen a hard path. Living in one room with her siblings, she toils all day making ale, only to have the landlords confiscate the proceeds. Her life has been tortuously difficult for five years all because she left her husband, Merlyn Lammergeier, Laird of Ravensmuir. Merlyn's family trade was the sale of religious artifacts to the wealthy. When Ysabella found out the artifacts were fakes, she packed up her principles and left. Now Merlyn needs her help. When she refuses, he tricks her into believing that he's dead and that she has inherited Ravensmuir. The promise of having a roof over her head and food in her belly on a regular basis outweighs her pride and she moves in, only to have her husband reveal himself and attempt once again to engage her help. Ysabella's heart wars with her mistrust in Delacroix's engaging tale of lost love found, and, in fact, Merlyn is not the rogue she believes him to be. Maria Hatton
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
The Rogue FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
An unconventional heroine and a mystery about forged religious relics lend spice to this beguiling medieval romance from Delacroix, author of the Bride Quest series (The Beauty, etc.). Ysabella is an illiterate peasant living in near poverty with her sister and young brother. The family is reviled by the town for aspiring above its station-five years earlier, impetuous Ysabella married Merlyn Lammergeier, the lord of the manor, only to leave him in a fortnight. While the town assumes she's been cast off, the truth is she refused to live with a man who earned his fortune selling false relics to wealthy lords. Merlyn left Ravensmuir shortly thereafter but has now returned to reclaim his birthright and his bride. When he is attacked and left for dead, Ysabella agrees to play the grieving widow to help discover the assailant. Delacroix does a fine job of integrating historical detail into her plot; Ysabella's illiteracy, for example, is not merely mentioned, but used as a source of conflict between the couple. The story is told in the first person from Ysabella's point of view, which lends it an air of oral history, and the details of the relic trade are engrossing. Though a few plot twists are predictable, readers will treasure this rich and compulsively readable tale. (Oct.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.