New York Times bestselling author Brenda Joyce takes you back to the Highlands, where the battle for land, liberty and love rages onâ¦
A bastard daughter, Alana was cast away at birth and forgotten by her mighty Comyn family. Raised in solitude by her grandmother, she has remained at a safe distance from the war raging through Scotland. But when a battle comes close to home and she finds herself compelled to save an enemy warrior from death, her own life is thrown into danger.
Iain of Islayâs allegiance is to the formidable Robert Bruce. His beautiful rescuer captures both his attention and his desire, but Alana must keep her identity a secret even as she is swept up into a wild and forbidden affair. But as Bruceâs army begins the final destruction of the earldom, Alana must decide between the family whose acceptance sheâs always sought, or the man she so wrongly loves.
Praise for New York Times bestselling author Brenda Joyce
âScotlandâs complex history is as strong a character as the hero and heroine, and Joyce seamlessly merges the historical details of Robert the Bruceâs rise to power with a captive/captor, forbidden love story. Highland history sings on the pages through Joyceâs potent prose.â
âRT Book Reviews on A Rose in the Storm
âAs dangerous and intriguing as readers could desire. This is a tale reminiscent of genre classics, with its lush and fascinating historical details and sensuality.â
âRT Book Reviews on Surrender
âFirst-rateâ¦featuring multidimensional protagonists and sweeping dramaâ¦Joyceâs tight plot and vivid cast combine for a romance thatâs just about perfect.â
âPublishers Weekly, starred review, on The Perfect Bride
âTruly a stirring story with wonderfully etched charactersâ¦romance at its best.â
âBooklist on The Perfect Bride
âRomance veteran Joyce brings her keen sense of humor and storytelling prowess to bear on her witty, fully formed characters.â
âPublishers Weekly on A Lady at Last
âSexual tension cracklesâ¦in this sizzling, action-packed adventure.â
âLibrary Journal on Dark Seduction
Dear Readers,
I hope you have enjoyed Alana and Iainâs story as much as I have. Once again, my muse led me to portray a small, brave woman fighting for her life and her love in a bygone and dangerous world dominated by men. As you know, this is a theme that I have returned to time and again, for nothing fascinates more than a woman confronted by male powerâand triumphing over it in the end by bringing that man to his very knees out of pure love and raw passion.
While Alana is a fictional character, her family is not. Joan le Latimer was married to Sir Alexander Comyn, the sheriff of Aberdeen, and the Earl of Buchanâs second brother. She did have a cousin, Elisabeth. However, I have entirely fabricated the story of their lives. If Elisabeth fell in love with her cousinâs fiancé, much less had a love child with him, it would be a great coincidenceâand so very cool!
Donald of Islay was the cousin of both Alexander and Angus MacDonald. Angus Og gave him command of a Highland army, and he was sent to fight for Bruce. Donald was one of four brothers, the youngest being Iain. I found no mentions of Iain in history otherwise, and chose to use him as this storyâs hero. Obviously I have entirely fictionalized his life.
The other major historical characters that I have attempted to portray are the Earl of Buchan and Robert Bruce. I have characterized them for my own endsâportraying them in a manner that is the most dramatic possible, to best enhance Alana and Iainâs love story.
This is the third story I have written that is set during Bruceâs bloody quest for Scotlandâs throne. In 1307, Bruce began his campaign to destroy the Earl of Buchan and the entire Comyn family, once and for all. By the summer of 1308, Buchanâs armies were decimated and scattered to the four winds, with Buchan having fled to England, where he would soon die. Bruce then began his infamous and merciless Harrying of the North.
Alice Comyn was the Earl of Buchanâs heir. She married Henry de Beaumont sometime before July 1310, and the couple put forth their claim to the Buchan earldom, resulting in a long struggle that was one of the causes of the Second War of Scottish Independence.
This novel is a work of fiction. This period in Scotlandâs history is filled with conflicting accounts and huge gaps in information, allowing me to pick and choose what I want to write, how I want to write it, while permitting me to fill in any blanks any way I wish. I have put Alana and Iainâs love story ahead of historical accuracy. While most of the battles, incidents, events and characters are a part of history, I have exercised poetic license throughout. Any errors in fact are mine.
Happy Reading,
Brenda Joyce
For Rick Christenâ
Because what happened in Vegas did not stay in Vegas, Because second chances can really happen, Because two is better than one, Because I love you, Always