When young Diana Winslow arrived at Castle Bannaster, her beauty and bravery disguised beneath a servant's dress, she had no idea her life would change forever. But now the cruel and lecherous Viscount Bannaster lies dead—and the novice Bladeswoman cannot escape her guilt. Nothing, not even fighting for the Crown, can erase her fears . . . especially when she comes face to face with Thomas, the viscount's startlingly seductive brother.
Desperate to keep him from discovering the truth, Diana attempts a daring abduction. But all her skills as a knight are no defense against the powerful, irresistible nobleman who has just become her prisoner. A man with a mystery of his own. A man who eyes her so hungrily, so wantonly, that he could tempt her to give up all her secrets for one wicked night in his arms . . .
Gayle Kloecker grew up in Erie, Pensylvaina, daughter of Renee and Francis Kloecker. In the college, she started to study engineering, but she left it. She married James Callen, and they had three children: Jim, Michelle, and Laura. The family resides in a suburb of Central New York.
She needed 13 years to sell her first novel in 1999. Named the "Notable New Author of 1999," Gayle has also won the Holt Medallion and the Laurel Wreath Award, and finaled in the National Readers Choice Awards. A past President of the Central New York Romance Writers, she is also a member of Romance Writers of America, the Authors Guild, and Novelists Inc. She wrote also under the pseudoyms of Julia Latham and Emma Cane. Besides writing, she loves to read, sing, crochet, and delve too deeply into historical research.
Reviewed for queuemyreview.com; book release Sep08
Really 3.5 stars. As I was a bit of a tomboy growing up, I’ve often wondered how tomboys fared in days of yore. Were they beaten into submission? Could they run away…but to what? Were there men strong enough and secure enough to let them live in a manner different than that customary for women of the times? I’d like to think the last was true, so I was very interested in reading “Secrets of the Knight� by Julia Latham when I realized its heroine is a female warrior. This is actually her third (and I believe final) story in a series about ‘knights�. I hadn’t read the first two and didn’t have any problems reading this as a standalone novel.
Diana isn’t like other women of her time. She spent her childhood escaping to ‘the lists� every chance she got and even entered a tournament in disguise as a 17-year old. It was there she was noticed by the “League of the Blade�--a group of anonymous swordsmen who fight for the defenseless—and she was recruited to their cause. On her first assignment, her impulsiveness and immaturity result in a situation where she has to kill a man, a Viscount no less, and her life changes forever. Six years later, her impulsiveness leads her to capture and imprison the one man who ‘might� be able to identify her as the murderess…and her life changes yet again.
The current Viscount Bannister has no idea why he’s been imprisoned in a dungeon. But after a childhood in the sterile environment of a future priest, he can’t stand captivity. So instead, he focuses on the interesting woman who is his only contact with his captors. When he frees himself and realizes she was his captor, he decides not to expose her deed, but rather play a waiting game to figure out what her real purpose was. The more time he spends with her, the more he realizes that she is the only woman he can imagine building a future with. But he will have to convince her to spill her secrets…even if he must seduce them out of her.
I thought it was very cool that a woman from this era was accepted as a ‘Bladeswoman� in this secret society. Her unwillingness to accept the limits of traditional roles for women of that time was quite refreshing. She made no efforts to ‘hide� her abilities, yet didn’t come off as mannish. She could be the poster child of her time for ‘women’s lib�. What I never really understood was WHY Diana made the choices she did. Other than hearing ‘she wasn’t like other women�, we never learn what made Diana the woman she is. That bugged me throughout the book. I kept waiting…but no joy.
I liked the author’s inclusion of traditions and mores of that time in history and season and thought she did a fine job of including them without bashing the reader over the head with them. Her characters acted true to their inner natures even when presented with surprising and unusual situations and I quite liked that. Her love scenes were quite passionate, but I honestly never felt the growth into love between the hero and heroine. I felt the lust, but not the love. It seemed that so much of the story was taken up with needless conflicts caused by a lack of communication between the two. And there was very little meaningful input from any of the secondary characters; they were all quite forgettable with the exception of the younger sister who was an outright witch!
As a work of romantic fiction, I quite enjoyed reading Diana and Tom’s story in “Secrets of the Knight�. The detractors I’ve mentioned could well be things that other readers might not even notice. So if you’re looking for a medieval story of a woman’s libber paired with a knight in slightly tarnished armor…then you’ll definitely enjoy Julia Latham’s story. I enjoy the Victorian novels she writes under the name Gayle Callen, so I may give her next medieval another try.
Ik heb de Nederlandstalige versie gelezen : Bezwaard hart - Candlelight Historische roman 810 Dit is het 3e en laatste deel van de Broederschap van het Zwaard serie en ik vind het een waardige afsluiter van een leuke serie die een beetje zwak begon met boek 1 maar de volgende 2 delen waren een heel stuk beter .
La fin est un peu à l’image du livre dans son ensemble : satisfaisante, mais pas surprenante. On sait que tout va arriver à ce final et les derniers rebondissements n’apportent pas d’ultime frisson.
This is a solidly-written romance novel, with a nicely flawed hero and a totally unbelievable in historical context heroine. The heroine was relateable, though, and it was very easy to enjoy this book. For some reason (possibly because this was a historical period I'm not that into, possibly because of the modern-woman-in-medieval-times problem) I never fully found myself immersed in this novel.
If you read the back and it looks like this novel will push your buttons, you'll probably like it very much. If you read the back and have doubts, leave it on the shelf - though it's a good, solid romance novel, it's not good enough to sell you on subject matter you're iffy on.
I'm reading this as part of an assignment, it's not something I would normally pick up though I do read romance. I thought it started out promising, and then about half-way through I just lost interest - the conflict between hero and heroine was too manufactured and thin, their attraction wasn't quite believable or strong enough - I don't know. It just lacked something, in my mind. Pretty well-written as far as language goes. Feminist slant for the heroine. Not terrible by any stretch, but not my cup of tea, either.
OMG!! i totally loved this book because it showed that not all women are weak and need a man to protect them over every little thing. Diana was truely amazing...but i really wanted to choke her sister cicely she bugged me so bad...kind of like my sister :)
This was Book 3 & it ended the series- The League of The Blade. Once you start reading it you do not want to put it down. Bannister is able to redeem himself in this book - he is no longer an ass & Diana & him have a past that he was unaware of until she tells him. Great story!!!