"exhilarating fifteenth century Scottish romance"
In 1480 Scotland dying Angus MacReith forces distant
relative Artan Murray to agree to a death bed promise
though the younger man does not believe the "three score"
older male, who fostered him and his injured brother
Lucas, is near death. He demands Artan go to the lowlands
to fetch his niece Cecily Donaldson, heir to Glascreag,
before he dies. Unable to say no to his mentor, Artan
begins his journey, but cannot envision a female
especially a lowlander as a chieftain in the Highlands.
The rest of Angus' plan stinks as far as Artan is
concerned; the old man wants him to marry this biddable
female so he can be the laird. However, when he arrives in the Lowlands, he finds Cecily
about to marry the King's choice for her, Sir Fergus
Ogilvy. Artan tells her that Sir Fergus has plans for his
shrewish wife to be out of his way when he is the Laird of
Glascreag; only she does not believe him until her fiancé
abducts her. However, able to think on her feet, she
informs her once future groom that she is handfasted to
Artan, who takes her with him. Sir Fergus refuses to give
up on his ambition, so he leads an attack on the couple,
targeting his rival. As Cecily and Artan fall in love
they debate the characteristics of a perfect wife to a
laird until he is mortally wounded. This is an exhilarating fifteenth century Scottish
romance, which sub-genre fans expect no less from
Hannah "Highlander" Howell. The latest tale contains
three fully developed characters as the lead couple
battles over the ideal perfect wife and against the
deviously clever Sir Fergus. HIGHLAND BARBARIAN is
another well written tale from a consistently good writer,
who some consider the Queen of the Scottish historical
romance. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted January 8, 2007
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