The Ultimate Review of Master of Sin

Lots of people in the romance community know “Janga,” whose intelligence, knowledge and love for romance books is legendary. She approaches books with a professor’s eye and a reader’s heart, and her reviews are always well-thought-out and on-the-mark. When we belonged to the Eloisa James/Julia Quinn bulletin board, I always knew if she liked a book, I would like it too–she became my go-to gal for recommendations.

So her review of Master of Sin means more to me than I can say. My “link” link to this blog seems to be broken, so I’m reposting the review from her blog Just Janga in its entirety.

“Andrew Rossiter is a male prostitute who is paying a return visit to Duca Allesandro di Maneiro and his wife. Rossiter, who fathered the couple’s heir, two-and-a- half-year-old Marco, has been hired to impregnate the duchess a second time. The key players are on board the duke’s yacht when assassins board it, killing the duke and duchess. Andrew escapes with the child, but knowing his son’s life remains in jeopardy, he establishes a new identity on an isolated island in the Outer Hebrides. Andrew Rossiter has become Andrew Ross, a widower with one child.

Waiting for him on the island is Gemma Peartree, an impertinent sprite who speaks six languages. Their meeting is unpropitious. Gemma has been waiting on the island for two weeks. The house Andrew has purchased through agents is in disrepair, Gemma’s possessions have been lost, and the island is cold and wind-blown. Gemma badly needs a bath and a change of clothing. When Andrew first sees her, she looks more like scullery maid than a governess. Andrew is eager to be rid of her. Not only is she not governess material, but also the inexplicable attraction he feels threatens his vow to put sin behind him. More important, Marco, who has been ripped from all that is familiar to him, forms a quick attachment to Gemma, who is gentle with him and the only person on the Gaelic-speaking island who speaks Italian. And, as Gemma keeps reminding Andrew, she has a contract.

Both Andrew and Gemma are haunted by their pasts and protective of their secrets. Andrew’s past is more deeply shadowed than Gemma’s. His angelic looks are ironic in view of his sordid secrets and the dark forces that shaped him from childhood. He believes himself incapable of giving or receiving love and unworthy of happiness. It will take all Gemma’s stubbornness and all her wiles to persuade Andrew that he has a heart that can be filled with love for her and for his son, to convince him that a future untainted by the past is within his reach.

Redemption stories are among my favorites, and this one is superb. First of all, it truly is about a man in need of redemption. Readers familiar with Mistress by Marriage will know that Andrew Rossiter is no titled hero suffering from a guilty conscience over wasting his substance on drink and doxies. He is, as Gemma recognizes full well, “a man who had done everything with everybody.” But the most fertile ground for love’s redemptive powers is often found in the hearts of those who believe themselves unfit to be redeemed. Second, both Andrew and Gemma grow during the course of the book. Revelation of secrets sheds healing light, and the love they feel for one another and for Marc frees them to become more fully the selves they were meant to be.

This final book in Robinson’s Courtesan Court series is a dark story, but it is also one filled with flashes of humor and seductive sensuality with characters who compel the reader’s interest. It has the added benefit of Robinson’s lucid, skillfully crafted prose. If you’ve read Robinson’s other Courtesan Court books (Mistress by Mistake, Mistress by Midnight, and Mistress by Marriage), you probably have Master of Sin on your TBB list. If you haven’t read Robinson yet, what are you waiting for? Master of Sin can be read as a standalone. And I’m betting that you’ll find these books the verbal equivalent of Lay’s potato chips: bet you can’t read just one.”

Thank you, Janga!

Romance Junkies Reviews Master of Sin

Thanks, Dottie from Romance Junkies! Here’s a snippet from the review:

A delightfully decadent read, MASTER OF SIN, the fourth and final book in phenomenal author Maggie Robinson’s COURTESAN COURT series, is a witty, sensual historical romance. Maggie Robinson fans will already be familiar with hero Andrew Rossiter and will learn the reasons behind his previous bad behavior. Due to his scandalous past, Andrew does not feel that anyone can really love him, nor does he feel worthy of love. But Gemma has secrets of her own. Infused with secrets galore, complex characters, witty dialogue, sexual tension, murder, suspense, passion and romance, this emotion-packed story is an absolute delight. Is there any wonder that Ms. Robinson has become one of my very favorite authors? Readers will find themselves rooting for this very atypical couple, who deserve the happiness that has long been denied them.

Lords of Passion Re-release

Lords of Passion will be released as a mass-market paperback on November 1, 2012! This anthology features wonderful novellas by legendary Virginia Henley and Kate Pearce, as well as my “Not Quite a Courtesan.”

Publishers Weekly said: This lively book collects three well-matched historical romance novellas set in England. In Henley’s “Beauty and the Brute,” high-born teens Charles and Sarah are wedded to settle Charles’s father’s gambling debts. Mortal enemies on their wedding day, they part for three years, only to reunite as strangers and experience unexpected passion. In Pearce’s “How to Seduce a Wife,” prim young Louisa March yearns to feel pleasure in the bedroom. Her husband, Nicholas, wants to help her, but doesn’t know how. Could a Mayfair madam help them? In Robinson’s delicious “Not Quite a Courtesan,” a young heiress gets far more than she bargains for when she marries into a family of swindlers short on cash but long on charm. Readers will float away on the literary flair of these escapist tales, each touched with just the right amount of eroticism.

Lord Gray in All His Glory

Zounds! Love the tagline: “Sometimes scandal comes looking for you.” Lord Gray and his list will be joining us in November 27, 2012. Thank you, Kensington art department! 🙂

Time Marches On

Thank you Carrie Divine at Seductive Musings for selecting Mistress by Marriage as a 2011 favorite!

We’re back home from our Florida trip. We enjoyed our stay so much that next year we’d like to stay through March–which seems especially relevant since we’re due to get a huge snowstorm tomorrow on March 1. I’m not a big winter person, so I’m definitely at a disadvantage since I live in Maine. 😛

I’m doing revisions for Captain Durant’s Countess before I turn it in to my editor. I even worked on the plane coming home. And then…on to my secret project. My agent and I are excited about my next series and hope an editor will be excited too!

For the March website contest, I’m giving away a signed hardcover copy of Master of Sin! Enter on the contest page. 🙂