My inconvenient duke

Loretta Lynda Chase, 1949-

Book - 2025

Lady Alice Ancaster must find a husband quickly to protect her family's dukedom from their cousin, but she finds herself irresistibly drawn to the Duke of Blackwood, a childhood friend whose reckless lifestyle complicates her choice and challenges her ability to trust him as a hero in her time of need.

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FICTION/Chase Loretta
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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Historical fiction
Love stories
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Avon, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Loretta Lynda Chase, 1949- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
viii, 322 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780063094550
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Giles Lyon, Duke of Blackwood, knows he is no knight in shining armor. In fact, as one of the "Dis-Graces," Giles, along with his friends the Duke of Ashmont and the Duke of Ripley, are known throughout polite society for their outrageous behavior and outlandish pranks. So, the very least Giles can do for Alice Ancaster, the Duke of Ripley's sister, is to stay as far away from her as possible while Alice navigates the marriage mart in London. However, given Alice's propensity for championing underdogs and righting societal wrongs, it isn't long before Giles needs to dust off his slightly tarnished armor and do what he can to help keep her out of trouble. With the latest dazzling addition to her Difficult Dukes series (A Duke in Shining Armor, Ten Things I Hate about the Duke), readers will again revel in Chase's buoyant yet deliciously sharp sense of wit and her ability to craft radiantly romantic love stories rendered with the meticulous attention to detail she pays to everything, from nuanced characterization to an expertly evoked historical setting.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A duke's sister is drawn to one of her brother's best friends in Chase's page-turning conclusion to the Difficult Dukes Victorian romance series (after Ten Things I Hate About the Duke). Lady Alice Ancaster worries that the reckless behavior of her brother, Hugh, the Duke of Ripley, and his infamous friends the Dukes of Ashmont and Blackwood--who, together, are known as the Dis-Graces--will end in Hugh's untimely death, leaving the dukedom and Alice by extension under the control of her vile cousin, Lord Worbury. To save herself from this fate, she'll need a husband, so she heads to London to enter the marriage market, warning Hugh to stay away lest his reputation hurt her chances. Hugh's friend Blackwood, who has long been attracted to Alice, is also in the city, however, and he steps in to take Alice's side during a public argument between her and Lord Worbury. Alice is determined to avoid further interaction--until Hugh goes missing and she and Blackwood must team up to track him down. Passion ignites, but can Alice trust that Blackwood is really ready to settle down? Chase's leads are captivating; readers will cheer for strong-willed Alice, especially in a subplot about her quest to help London's orphans, and swoon over reformed rake Blackwood. This is a worthy finale. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In a neat twist, Chase fits this continuation of the LJ-starred "Difficult Dukes" series in and around A Duke in Shining Armor and Ten Things I Hate About the Duke. The story of Lady Alice Ancaster and the Duke of Blackwood begins before the events of those two books take place, filling the space when Alice's future was in jeopardy--because if her wastrel brother Ripley won't shape up, their beastly cousin will inherit when Ripley inevitably dies in some accident, duel, or wager. To protect her future, Alice goes on the marriage market and is about to promise herself to a lovely middle-aged man when Blackwood finally wakes up and sees that Alice really needs to spend her life with him. Chase, lauded for her deftness with dialogue, smart plots, and emotional resonance, expects readers to pay attention and rewards them with subtle, clever, and swoony storytelling. VERDICT Showcasing what she does best, Chase pens another winner. Series fans will be delighted, and new readers can jump into the story here.--Neal Wyatt

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In Victorian London, a young woman decides she must find a husband, only to fall in love with her brother's best friend. Lady Alice Ancaster is the younger sister of the Duke of Ripley, who, along with his friends Ashmont and Blackwood, is one of the young, brash, and wealthy dukes known in society as "Their Dis-Graces." When the latest drunken antics of the Dis-Graces almost get her brother killed, Alice decides she has no choice but to secure a husband for herself. If her brother dies, she will fall into the clutches of his heir, the vile Lord Worbury. When Giles Bouverie Lyon, Duke of Blackwood, learns of Alice's plan, he follows her to London, determined to protect her interests. When he was 17, Blackwood chose the desultory life of an entitled young aristocrat over a courtship with Alice, but now that he's nearing 30, he is ready to settle down and make Alice his wife. Chase's sparkling, witty banter is on fine display, but the plot is almost aggressively disjointed. Alice is courted by an older gentleman considering marriage for the first time; Worbury plots Ripley's downfall, hoping to inherit the wealthy estate; Alice asks Blackwood to help her find a young street urchin who's in trouble; and Alice and Blackwood learn that her brother is missing and search the countryside to find him. The real purpose of these disparate scenes is to show Blackwood in a new light, both to himself and to Alice. He is a mature and competent partner on their adventures, leading Alice to reconsider her opinion of him and agree to marriage. It's effective until Blackwood decides to risk his marriage to save his friends--a timeline that was established in previous books in the series, but one that leaves this book feeling emotionally hollow. Fidelity to the timeline of previous books weighs down a long-awaited romance. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.