Friday, December 11, 2020

True of Heart by Martha Keyes

book cover
True of Heart
by Martha Keyes


ISBN-13: 979-8670606516
ebook: 332 pages
Released: September 15th 2020

Source: Rented ebook.

Book Description from Goodreads:
Miss Ruth Hawthorn helps support her fatherless family the only way she can: doling out love advice in a local newspaper column under an assumed name, The Swan. When she receives a lucrative request for an in-person consultation from someone signed "O," her brother persuades her to go to London with him, teaching him what he needs to know in order to survive the short appointment. But when "O" moves up the time of the rendez-vous and Ruth's brother is nowhere to be found, she is forced to take matters into her own hands.

Philip Trent, Lord Oxley, knows precisely which woman will best fill his late mother's shoes as the viscountess—now all he needs is a little help winning her over, swarmed as she is by suitors. Ashamed of his ineptitude with women but determined to succeed, Philip secretly enlists help. The youthful, bespectacled Swan seems like the last person capable of providing such help, but Philip finds in the young man both a friend and a confidant, with a surprising understanding of love.

Philip's choice of woman is proving more difficult than anticipated, though, and Ruth's ongoing disguise and frequent meetings with him are taxing her conscience—and her heart. With more secrets than Ruth can manage and a heart long since lost to her most important client, she faces the threat of discovery and ruin—a prospect somehow eclipsed by the heartbreak she will face when those secrets are inevitably discovered by the man she loves. True of Heart is a sweet Regency retelling of Shakespeare's classic, Twelfth Night.


My Review:
True of Heart is a Regency romance inspired by the Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night." I honestly wasn't sure how the author was going to pull off a man falling in love with a woman that he thinks is a man, but this was very well written and it worked for me. Ruth is forced to pretend to be a man to tutor Philip (who's very nervous around women) on how to win a highly desirable marriage match. Philip's comfortable around her and becomes good friends with her, so he's shocked to later find that she's a woman. He then begins to question if he's been looking for the wrong things in marriage.

The main characters were engaging, complex, and reacted realistically to events. I loved how the friendship and respect grew between Ruth and Philip and then developed into love. The historical details were woven into the story to give it a very Regency feel. There was no sex or bad language. Overall, I'd recommend this well-written, humorous novel.


If you've read this book, what do you think about it? I'd be honored if you wrote your own opinion of the book in the comments.


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