From Publishers Weekly
The four stories in Once Upon a Kiss, the newest volume in the Once Upon... series (Once Upon a Rose, etc.), contain elements of the fantastic, but only Nora Roberts and Jill Gregory succeed in making the unbelievable believable. Fate pairs a contemporary P.I. with an Amazonian demon slayer from a parallel universe in Roberts's irresistibly funny "A World Apart," and shades of Harry Potter and Romeo & Juliet can be found in Gregory's "Impossible," a charming fable of two lovers who bring peace to their feuding families through marriage. In contrast, Ruth Ryan Langan ("Sealed with a Kiss") and Marianne Willman ("Kiss Me, Kate") stumble with stories that would have been better suited as novels. Overall, this unbalanced collection isn't likely to encourage readers new to the series to look up the previous books, but there's no question that it will grace bestseller lists. Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Once Upon a Kiss FROM THE PUBLISHER
Love, passion, and desire. It all begins with a kiss...
A World Apart
#1 New York Times bestselling author Nora Roberts
A ravishing medieval Demon Slayer arrives in 20th century New York to brave a strange new worldᄑand a man who will be her destiny.
Impossible
Jill Gregory
The battle between two warring families becomes a battle of the sexes when a bewitching beauty finds herself kidnapped by her sworn enemy.
Sealed With a Kiss
Ruth Ryan Langan
Her father may have given her hand in marriage to a fearsome warlord, but itᄑs his trusted warrior who captures her heart...
Kiss Me, Kate
Marianne Willman
A lovely American inherits an English manor and her dreams of romance come true when she meets an enchanted prince. But is he her one true love?
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
The four stories in Once Upon a Kiss, the newest volume in the Once Upon... series (Once Upon a Rose, etc.), contain elements of the fantastic, but only Nora Roberts and Jill Gregory succeed in making the unbelievable believable. Fate pairs a contemporary P.I. with an Amazonian demon slayer from a parallel universe in Roberts's irresistibly funny "A World Apart," and shades of Harry Potter and Romeo & Juliet can be found in Gregory's "Impossible," a charming fable of two lovers who bring peace to their feuding families through marriage. In contrast, Ruth Ryan Langan ("Sealed with a Kiss") and Marianne Willman ("Kiss Me, Kate") stumble with stories that would have been better suited as novels. Overall, this unbalanced collection isn't likely to encourage readers new to the series to look up the previous books, but there's no question that it will grace bestseller lists. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.