From Booklist
Rejected from birth by her father, who blamed her for her mother's death, Maresa Fairweather grows up without the love of a real family. But she finds a satisfactory substitute in her neighbors, the Bronwells, whose younger son Percy becomes Maresa's best friend and confidant. Unaware that Percy is in love with her, Maresa blossoms into a beautiful young woman with a reputation as a flirt who leaves behind a trail of broken engagements. When Maresa once again finds herself engaged to a man she does not love, this time while she is in Italy visiting her mother's family, she turns to Percy, who is an officer in the British navy, for help in breaking the engagement. Now Percy must decide if he is willing to become involved again with the one woman he is trying to forget. Coffman is particularly good with characterization, including the delightfully stubborn, willful Maresa, while the wild Yorkshire moors and Tuscan countryside settings give this regency historical a refreshingly different flavor. John Charles
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Fifth Daughter FROM OUR EDITORS
Given the choice between saving the life of his wife or his unborn child, Lord Strathmore chooses the child, hoping to finally gain a son -- and is shattered to discover he has sacrificed the wife he adored merely for a fifth daughter. Within hours he has taken his four older children and fled to London, leaving the tiny, unwanted babe in the care of servants. Knowing she is unloved, believing herself the cause of her mother's death, that fifth daughter, Maresa, treasures the friendship that grows between her and her lifelong neighbor Percy Bronwell. When she is still too young to understand the complexities of love, she refuses Percy's suggestion of marriage, fearing to alter the friendship that, she believes, makes them closer than any husband and wife could ever be. Later, Maresa travels to Italy to visit her mother's family -- and fate brings Percy into her life once more. The dashing naval officer is chilled to learn that Maresa has accepted an offer of marriage from a man she has come to fear. After a string of broken engagements that have damaged her reputation, her father is demanding that this time she must wed -- and Percy realizes that the only way to keep Maresa safe is to marry her himself. But, after only one night of bliss, the fortunes of war part the lovers, and Maresa will need all the courage Percy's love inspires to secure their future together. Though the story of The Fifth Daughter is at times bittersweet, it has nice touches of humor, drama, and romance -- and a terrific hero.