Highland Crown (Royal Highlander, 1)
Highland Crown (Royal Highlander, 1) book cover

Highland Crown (Royal Highlander, 1)

Mass Market Paperback – April 30, 2019

Price
$5.24
Publisher
St. Martin's Paperbacks
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1250314970
Dimensions
4.56 x 0.85 x 7.37 inches
Weight
4.8 ounces

Description

"This new series opener from husband and wife team McGoldrick ( Sleepless in Scotland ) is a fast-paced, well-written trip through a fictional Scottish landscape loosely based on historical events. Readers will soon be caught up in Cinead and Isabella’s love story. " - Library Journal "The characters are well developed, as well as the conflict that surrounds them ... Highland Crown is an enjoyable well written historical that I would recommend. " - Affaire de Coeur Magazine"McGoldrick seamlessly blends real history with her invention of connections, people and events … Highland Crown is one of the best Regency-era books I have read in recent months, and it is a worthwhile addition to your home library." - Frolic Media"McGoldrick takes you to another place and another time with a steamy romance that is sure to tug at your heart … Stellar writing and captivating storytelling." - Fresh Fiction"McGoldrick has bestowed upon readers a feel-good whirlwind romance between two intelligent, driven individuals that is less about the complications of a new relationship and more about celebrating a partnership." - Bookpage"The perfect example of historical adventure romance that’s fun, engaging, and too good to put down to do necessary things. I literally couldn’t stop and would wake up in the middle of the night to read a few more pages." - Romance Junkies"A great premise and the backdrop of the Highlands – how can a reader go wrong?" - Romance Reviews Today Authors Nikoo and Jim McGoldrick (writing as May McGoldrick) weave emotionally satisfying tales of love and danger. Publishing under the names of May McGoldrick and Jan Coffey, these authors have written more than thirty novels and works of nonfiction for Penguin Random House, Mira, HarperCollins, Entangled, and Heinemann. Nikoo, an engineer, also conducts frequent workshops on writing and publishing and serves as a Resident Author. Jim holds a Ph.D. in Medieval and Renaissance literature and teaches English in northwestern Connecticut. They are the authors of Much ado about Highlanders , Taming the Highlander , and Tempest in the Highlands with SMP Swerve. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Highland Crown By May McGoldrick St. Martin's Press Copyright © 2019 May McGoldrickAll rights reserved.ISBN: 978-1-250-31497-0 CHAPTER 1 Sleep the sleep that knows not breaking, Morn of toil, nor night of waking. — Sir Walter Scott, "Lady of the Lake," Canto I, stanza 31 Duff Head, Northeast Highland Coast June 1820 "Hard times been choking folks around here for a long while, and most of them would sell their own kin if they thought there's a ha'penny to be made from it." Jean paused and fixed her eye on her guest. "And one look at ye, and they'll know yer good for more than that." A loud pop from the driftwood fire in the old woman's hearth drew Isabella's gaze. Sparks rose from the blue and lavender flames, struggling to find their way up the chimney. Wind and rain from the storm hammered fiercely at the shutters and the cottage door. From what she'd learned on the journey here from John Gordon, Jean's nephew, the village that huddled around the cove in the shadow of Duff Head consisted of no more than a few dozen families of fishing folk trying to scratch a meager living out of the sea. Desperate. Hungry. Poor. Though she'd always lived her life in the city — Wurzburg, Edinburgh — she'd known many people like them. They didn't frighten her. The soldiers pursuing her posed the real danger. A ha'penny, Isabella mused. She was worth a fortune. These Highlanders knew nothing about the thousand pounds sterling on her head — the bounty offered by the government to anyone who could bring her back to Edinburgh alive to face interrogation, trial, and a public execution. Certainly, Jean had no knowledge of this. Nor did she know of the lesser amount bandied about by the radicals for her corpse to guarantee her silence. Both sides wanted her dead. "I've lived here my whole life. The sea makes ye hard, and these folks are hard as stone," the woman continued, perhaps reading a hint of skepticism in Isabella's face. "They give their loyalty to no one. In the Rising of '45, they wouldn't fight for any side. If ye weren't born here, yer an outsider. To them, even the Bonnie Prince was a stranger. And they don't trust strangers." If only her husband, Archibald, had been a little more like them, Isabella thought. Perhaps he'd still be alive. But it was his nature to take a side. And now, she and her sister and his daughter were running for their lives from the same butchers who cut him down in his own surgery as he tried to care for injured men. Men who'd simply stood up as citizens against a line of British Hussars in the streets of Edinburgh. "Yer a stranger and an unprotected woman traveling in the Highlands. An easy mark, to be sure," Jean warned. "They'll figure ye to be carrying at least a shilling or two, and they'll cut yer throat for it. And then yer carcass'll go into the sea. Them waters have swallowed up more than a few strangers." The older woman's dire prediction was surely an exaggeration, but the fate that Isabella faced if she fell into the hands of the British was not. Her late husband's friends, newly released after being held by the authorities, had often been brought to the surgery bearing horrible wounds. Their bodies had been broken. Unspeakable tortures had been inflicted on them. And it mattered naught if they were man or woman. "Ye keep to the cottage," Jean ordered, her tone as sharp as the needle she stabbed into the mending on her lap. "And if by chance anyone sees ye here, ye say nothing, ye hear? Ye look no one in the face, and ye answer no questions. If there's anything to be said, I'll do it." Outside, the storm continued unabated, and the wind whistled and rattled loose shutters. The stone cottage, poor as it was, provided safety and a thatched roof to keep most of the weather out. The rustic meal they'd shared of stewed fish and bannock cakes warmed and filled her. She was grateful to have it. The journey north through the Highlands had been wet and rough. "I appreciate you taking me in like this." "I took ye in because my nephew asked me to ... and gave me enough for yer room and board. But I don't know what John is up to. Other than yer name, he didn't say much about who ye are or where ye came from or where yer headed. But he's a good lad, and he's all the kin I have left. I trust him." The hard glare softened with affection. "He says to me, all I need to know is that yer a good woman and some vile Lowlanders'll pay to get their hands on ye. Says I'm to keep ye hidden for maybe three days. He'll come back for ye." Jean's nephew had gone back to Inverness to book passage for Isabella, her sister, and her stepdaughter on a ship that would carry them across the Atlantic to Halifax. But that meant three days of worrying and waiting before she was reunited with Maisie and Morrigan. Still, she hadn't let the lawyer tell her where he'd placed the young women in the port town. Isabella was afraid she'd be forced to divulge their whereabouts if she fell into the hands of her British pursuers. She had to keep faith that John would do right by the girls. He'd been charged by Sir Walter to look after them all until they left Scotland. Isabella's gaze fixed on Jean's trembling right hand. She'd noticed it before while the woman was eating, though her hostess tried to hide the infirmity. Now Jean's needle could not find the target, and she sat back in her chair in frustration as the piece slipped off her lap to the stone floor. Isabella bent over and fetched it, along with the woman's darning mushroom. "Let me finish this for you." Sitting across from her, she studied the threadbare stocking. There was hardly anything left of the heel to work with, but she put the needle to the task. From the corner of her eye, Isabella saw Jean using one hand to try and quiet the other. The Shaking Palsy. Jean's shuffling gait, the forward stooping, the occasional wiping of drool from the corner of the lips, and the trembling hand that wouldn't be controlled confirmed it. A disease with no cure that would become increasingly difficult to manage for a woman of advancing years who lived alone. Especially living in a place as desolate as this lonely outpost. Duff Head was a rocky bluff pushing out into the cold green-grey swells of the sea to the east of Inverness. And Jean's cottage sat like a hunchbacked sow between two stone-studded hills below the coast road, away from the village. She had no neighbors close by. Isolated as it was, Isabella understood why John suggested this would be a safe hiding place for her. Her own difficulties aside, it was troubling to think Jean lived alone, out of reach of immediate help if she needed it. Isabella made another covert survey of the cottage. The iron cooking pot was too heavy, and earlier, when Jean had struggled to swing it out from over the fire, Isabella had jumped to help her. The threadbare rug on the stone floor certainly presented a hazard as the ailing woman dragged her foot. If she fell and broke an arm or a hip, she could lie there helpless forever. "Does anyone visit you?" Jean bristled. "If someone comes to the door, I'll do the explaining. I'll say yer Mrs. Murray, a friend of a cousin, on yer way down from the Orkneys. Heading to the Borders, ye are. Resting here for a few days. That's all they need to know." Murray was her family name, and she'd lived as Isabella Murray for twenty-eight years until she'd married Archibald Drummond six years ago and returned to Scotland, to a homeland she hardly knew. "I only asked out of concern for you." Isabella looked at the gaps in the shutters where rain-drenched wind was coming through. And the thatched roof was hardly watertight. A stream was running down one wall and pooling in a dark corner. "I'm sure a cottage like this requires a great deal of upkeep and —" "I manage. Always have and always will. And I'm not about to hearken to John's talk of forcing me to live with him." The cap sitting atop the grey hair bobbed in agreement. "Feet-first is how I'll go. That's how my sainted husband left our house, and they can take me out the same way." Isabella had known very little about John Gordon's aunt before they got here. Their entire trip north, she'd been more worried about getting Maisie and Morrigan beyond the reach of the men who would surely be chasing them. "The curate does his duty and looks in on me once a fortnight when he comes through. And the women in the village stop by with a basket now and again." The door shook from the force of a gust of wind. Jean followed Isabella's gaze and frowned. "If one of them comes calling, remember what I said. No talking. Even a whisper of that Lowland accent'll give ye away." "I'm quite good at following directions. I'll cause you no trouble." The roof of the cottage shook as if in disagreement and showered them with broken bits of thatch. Trouble. Isabella plied the needle to the stocking. Trouble had been a constant companion to her from the moment Archibald brought them all back to Scotland, to their house on Infirmary Street near the surgical hospital. In Wurzburg — thanks to her father's tutelage and influence — she was living a quiet and productive life as an accomplished physician and surgeon, well-versed in the science of medicine, privileged among her sex for being allowed to practice in a profession dominated by men. Archibald had promised all would be the same in Edinburgh. Neither of them pretended that theirs was a love match. It was a marriage based on respect. It would meet their mutual needs, for her sister and his daughter would be provided for. She could practice medicine in his clinic and lead the same kind of life in Scotland. But he'd only spoken half the truth; he said nothing of the other part of himself. He was a political idealist, a reformer, and his nationalist consciousness had reawakened the moment he stepped foot on the soil of his homeland. From then on, her husband led two lives. One, as a respected and learned doctor who was sought after by Edinburgh's elite. And the other, as an activist whose evenings were constantly filled with secret meetings and radical efforts to change the repressive direction of the government in London. But that covert life of his, Isabella wanted no part in. She was Scottish by birth, but she'd lived nearly her entire life away from this land. Scottish nationalism and reform were lost on her, for she'd dedicated herself to one passion: medicine. The collapse of embers in the fireplace tore away a barrier in her mind, and suddenly she was back in her house in Edinburgh. Back in the midst of the mayhem of that fateful day in April. It had been a day of strikes. Weavers had ordered a shutdown of the city. Shopkeepers shuttered their windows and doors. Protests has been organized in Glasgow and in smaller towns as well. The government's response was direct and brutal. Troops on foot and horse attacked without warning, riding down and beating protesters in the street. After the clashes, eighteen were carried back to the clinic in their house with severe injuries. They hadn't enough room for all the patients. Bleeding men lay moaning on the floor, in the hall, on the table in the kitchen. Some were not conscious. Archibald saw to those wounded lying in the front rooms. Morrigan worked at her father's elbow. Isabella set the broken leg of a six-year-old boy, an innocent bystander knocked down by the mob trying to disperse and trampled on by the ironshod hoof of a cavalry steed. She'd just put the boy upstairs on her own bed when the sound of shouts and pounding outside drew her to the window. Red-coated militia crowded the street in front of the house. "Soldiers!" Maisie cried, rushing into the room. "Here. Demanding to be let in!" Sharp, clawing fingers of fear took her throat in a viselike grip. Isabella was no fool. She knew what was happening on the streets of the city. She was well aware of the identity of some of the wounded they were tending to downstairs at this very moment. She knew the roles these men were playing in the unrest. "Grab your cloak," Isabella ordered. "Go down the back steps and wait by the kitchen door while I fetch Morrigan. You two must leave the house." As she raced toward the stairs, the sound of the front door splintering from being battered open was followed by shouts. Her feet barely touched the boards as she flew down the steps. The front rooms — always a place of order and healing — were a battlefield. Tradesmen and women fought fiercely against the invading soldiers in blue and red jackets. She'd never seen such brawling. More shouting. A gunshot. Pushing through the chaos, she found her husband sprawled against a wall, blood spreading across his white shirt and waistcoat. He'd been shot in the chest. "Why?" she screamed at the men who continued to pour into the house. She crouched beside Archibald, pressing both hands to the wound, trying to staunch the flow of blood. "You can't help me," he breathed, pushing her hand away. He looked behind Isabella. "Take her from here. Go. Please." Fighting continued all around her, but she worked relentlessly to save her husband's life. Time stood still, and the air took on a nightmarish hue. Though Morrigan was right beside her, the young woman's keening cries had a distant, muffled sound. Still, Isabella struggled. But it was too late. Archibald knew. He shuddered, faded, and was gone. How she was able to get to the back of the house, pulling Morrigan behind her through the bedlam, Isabella could not later recall. But Maisie was waiting for them in the kitchen, standing before the barred garden door. Before Isabella could pull it open, someone outside began knocking. There was no escape. They were surrounded. "Don't forget what I told ye," Jean's barked order cut into the memories and jerked Isabella back into the present. She took a deep breath. The knocking was real. The haunting chaos of Edinburgh dissolved in an instant. Isabella peered through dim firelight at the door. Jean crooked a finger at her again before pushing to her feet and shuffling toward the entrance. Isabella's stomach clenched. Had they found her? The farther they'd traveled away from Edinburgh, the more days that passed, her worry of getting caught only increased. The accusations of her involvement, the news of the bounty on her head, overtook the travelers and raced ahead of them. Eyes of strangers followed her. She feared being taken at every roadside stop. And the suspicion of her husband's friends that she'd be a liability to them if she were captured only magnified the fear. Long before they'd reached Inverness, word had spread that both sides wanted her. The door creaked, and the old woman put her shoulder against it to stop the tempest from shoving it open wide. Jean nodded to whoever was outside and stepped out into the storm, pulling the door shut behind her. Isabella left the sewing on the chair and moved away from the fire. Near the foot of the cot sat her bag. Her faithful and courageous Edinburgh housekeeper had hidden the three women in her son's dank, airless dwelling in Cooper's Close in Canongate and delivered her medical instruments a few days after the attack on their house. The door was the only entrance into the cottage, and Isabella was trapped. Two windows cut through the thick walls. A stiff leather hide hung low on the wall near the fire, and she wondered if it might provide access to a woodshed or an animal pen. She picked up her cloak and bag but stopped. It was foolish to think about running. Even if she were able to get out that way, where would she go? She didn't know the country around her. Her sister and stepdaughter were somewhere in Inverness. Their next meeting was to be aboard a sailing ship bound for Halifax. But even that part of their plan was vague. The only thing Isabella had any confidence in was that John was coming back for her. All of their futures lay in the hands of John's colleague Walter Scott. Sir Walter Scott now. A generous man, he claimed he needed to repay a debt to Isabella, using his own funds and risking his own liberty. The door pushed open again and Isabella stood still, holding her breath and letting it out only when she saw Jean come back inside alone. The old woman latched the door behind her. "Someone knows I'm here?" "They don't," Jean said, going back to her place by the fire. "And that's all the better for ye." "What did they want?" "Nothing that concerns ye." The answer didn't make her feel less anxious. She was caught in a blind alley and recalling what she'd gone through only reinforced the helplessness of her position. "Is there anything I need to know? Or be worried about?" "Aye. Plenty." Jean looked sharply at her. "But no matter what happens, ye gave me yer word ye won't be leaving this cottage." "I shan't. I have nowhere to go. But what do you mean 'no matter what happens'? Do you expect trouble?" "Ye ask too many questions," she snapped. (Continues...) Excerpted from Highland Crown by May McGoldrick . Copyright © 2019 May McGoldrick. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Scottish pride, persuasion, and passion―this is Highland romance at its breathtaking best.
  • From USA Today bestselling author May McGoldrick comes
  • Highland Crown
  • , the first book in the
  • Royal Highlander
  • series.
  • Inverness, 1820
  • Perched on the North Sea, this port town―by turns legendary and mythological―is a place where Highland rebels and English authorities clash in a mortal struggle for survival and dominance. Among the fray is a lovely young widow who possesses rare and special gifts.
  • WANTED: Isabella Drummond
  • A true beauty and trained physician, Isabella has inspired longing and mystery―and fury―in a great many men. Hunted by both the British government and Scottish rebels, she came to the Highlands in search of survival. But a dying ship’s captain will steer her fate into even stormier waters. . .and her heart into flames.
  • FOUND: Cinaed Mackintosh
  • Cast from his home as a child, Cinaed is a fierce soul whose allegiance is only to himself. . . until Isabella saved his life―and added more risk to her own. Now, the only way Cinaed can keep her safe is to seek refuge at Dalmigavie Castle, the Mackintosh family seat. But when the scandalous truth of his past comes out, any chance of Cinaed having a bright future with Isabella is thrown into complete darkness. What will these two ill-fated lovers have to sacrifice to be together…for eternity?

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(86)
★★★★
25%
(71)
★★★
15%
(43)
★★
7%
(20)
23%
(65)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Bring on the rest in the series!

Scottish pride, persuasion, and passion…

The Radical War of 1820 is tearing Britain apart. In Scotland, cries of liberty, equality, and fraternity ring out in the streets, and the planned visit of the newly crowned British king fuel is fueling the Rising.

In this new series, an aging Sir Walter Scott wrestles with his past as he recalls three extraordinary women who found courage in the Highlands to fight for the future of a nation.

Historical fiction is one of my absolute favourite genres and especially when set against the turbulent backdrop of 1800’s Scotland. Highland Crown is a breath-taking novel which will pull you right into the heart of the action from the very beginning. The attention to detail is absolute perfection and even if you have never visited Scotland before, you will feel like you know it inside out by the time that you finish this book.

The book opens with a prologue by non-other than Sir Walter Scott! As someone who has read all of his books, this was so wonderful to have him be given a voice as a character in Highland Crown. He sets the reader up with a vivid backdrop of a turbulent 1820's Scotland, right before jumping into the action where we meet our main protagonist, Isabella Drummond; a beautiful physician on the run from English soldiers and Scottish rebels alike. After her husband is murdered, she makes her escape into the Highlands and holes up in a spinster’s cottage in the hope of disappearing from sight. Her plan to lay low is abruptly cut short when a ship’s Captain is washed ashore during a terrible storm and her life is put in even more danger than she could ever imagine.

Cinaed Mackintosh has just lost everything; his ship (Highland Crown), his trade, most of his crew and almost his life. Washed up on shore after a devastating ship wreck he is saved by Isabella. Adding more risk to her life, the only way Cinaed can keep Isabella safe is to return to the place from which he was banished years before. When the truth of his past is revealed, what are these two ill-fated lovers willing to sacrifice in order to be together.

Highland Crown is book 1 of the Royal Highlander Series but can be read as a standalone, although I know I for one, will be reading all the books in this fabulous series!
3 people found this helpful
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Historical Book with a bit of romance

When I started reading this book, I thought it was going to be a historical romance, but it turned out to be more of a suspenseful romance. The beginning of the book was great and I couldn't put it down. I loved how Isabella came to find Cinaed and all of the nail biting suspense that followed was great. However, after Isabella and Cinaed connected on a more romantic level the book fell flat for me. At that point it became very political (which I know it is even from the beginning of the book) and boring. I understand why the author left the ending a "cliffhanger" so that you would read the rest of the books in the series, but it felt like the story just ended and there wasn't really any closure. Wish I could say I enjoyed the book more, but I won't be reading the follow up books in this series. **ARC provided by NetGalley and the publisher. All opinions are my own**
3 people found this helpful
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Features a solid plot

Highland Crown was a pleasant read that features an intriguing plot with a few unexpected surprises along the way.

Isabella Drummond is wanted by men on both sides of the Scottish rebellion, the British who think she can name the rebels and the rebels who fear she will do just that. While hiding out awaiting passage to Canada, Isabella finds a ship’s captain washed ashore after losing his ship and Isabella can’t help but save the man. But Cinaed Mackintosh is not a man without secrets of his own and soon the pair are forced to flee to the Mackintosh homestead in a bid to outrun their pursuers. With their connection deepening by the day, Isabella and Cinaed will soon be forced to decide how much they’re willing to sacrifice for a chance at happily ever after.

Isabella is a university trained physician, a rare feat for a woman of her time. I admired Isabella’s determination to practice medicine despite society ruling it a profession for men. Isabella is dedicated to her work and is very good at what she does. Prior to going on the run, Isabella was married to a reformer who gave his life for the cause leading the authorities to assume Isabella had knowledge of other reformers in the area.

Cinaed was forced to leave him home as a child and he ended up being put to work on a ship. Through years of hard work and determination, Cinaed earned a ship of his own which was ultimately destroyed at the beginning of the book. Cinaed ended up having connections is some rather unexpected places and it was those connections that put him on the path that led to meeting Isabella.

Isabella and Cinaed’s relationship is where I had a bit of trouble with this book. Personally I never bought into the quick connection between the pair and I felt there wasn’t enough build up to anything real developing between them. During their travels there unfortunately wasn’t a lot of time for the two to spend time alone together which I think is what led to my lack of interest in their pairing. However there was a section of the book that has the pair entering into a bit of a fake dating scenario which I did enjoy as that’s one of my favorite romance tropes.

This book is centered against the backdrop of the Scottish rebellion and there are a number of scenes involving protests and similar events. In addition to scenes focused on the rebels, there are also a number involving the British authorities charged with dispelling the rebellion. I have personally never read a book that focused on these events and I have to say it was quite interesting. I’m definitely going to look into it some more on my own as I only have limited knowledge from school, television, and movies.

Despite the issues I had with the romance, I still enjoyed Highland Crown and I’m looking forward to the next book in the series, Highland Jewel, which looks to be more suited to my tastes.
2 people found this helpful
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Historical Romance

Highland Jewel: A Royal Highlander Novel is the second book in the Royal Highlander series by May Goldrick. It is a good historical book and a fun read. If you like action, political unrest, historical fiction with a great romance, you will like this book. I will be reading the next book in this series.

Thank you to Netgalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read this book for free.
1 people found this helpful
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Perfect for fans of Outlander!

Perfect for fans of Outlander and those seeking adventure in lush Scotland, complete with hunks in kilts!
1 people found this helpful
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You're in for a treat

You are in for a treat if you love a fast-paced action-packed historical romance. Author May McGoldrick is respected in the writing world for their intense research and descriptive writing which continues in this new "A Royal Highlander Novel" series.

The development of the primary characters Isabella and Cinaed are noteworthy. Both of them individually excel in what they do, have strong integrity and personalities with deep beliefs. On the surface they appear to have nothing in common but as the reader gets further into the story you will see they have more in common than what appears on the surface. Commitment to doing the right thing, caring and helping others who can't protect themselves and taking care of those they love are just a few examples. As they run for their lives they learn how to work as a team, to trust each other and then come to like and respect each other.

There is constant action in this book to keep the reader glued to the pages wanting to know what will happen next. This is what the author does with precision. Enthrall the reader.

5 STARS for the depth of this storyline and showing the readers that anything is possible even in the darkest of times.
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liked it

Mverness, 1820
Perched on the North Sea, this port town―by turns legendary and mythological―is a place where Highland rebels and English authorities clash in a mortal struggle for survival and dominance. Among the fray is a lovely young widow who possesses rare and special gifts.

WANTED: Isabella Drummond
A true beauty and trained physician, Isabella has inspired longing and mystery―and fury―in a great many men. Hunted by both the British government and Scottish rebels, she came to the Highlands in search of survival. But a dying ship’s captain will steer her fate into even stormier waters. . .and her heart into flames.

FOUND: Cinaed Mackintosh
Cast from his home as a child, Cinaed is a fierce soul whose allegiance is only to himself. . .until Isabella saved his life―and added more risk to her own. Now, the only way Cinaed can keep her safe to seek refuge at Dalmigavie Castle, the Mackintosh family seat. But when the scandalous truth of his past comes out, any chance of Cinaed having a bright future with Isabella is thrown into complete darkness. What will these two ill-fated lovers have to sacrifice to be together…for eternity?

My thoughts
Rating:4.5
A great start to a new to me historical romance story ,that has everything in it that you could want , and the you can tell as your read it that the author has put the time and effort to research her facts and that she has a way of mixing the facts with the fiction so we'll that they blend seamless together.And as your reading it the story comes to live with that said I want to thank Netgalley for letting me read and review it exchange for my honest opinion.
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A fugitive doctor and rebel find love

“Highland Crown” is the first book in the new trilogy by May McGoldrick. This book is loosely based on true historical events and gives us a feel for the Scots fight for independence from the British.

Isabella Drummond is a university trained doctor whose occupation draws just as much danger to herself as the memory of her late husband. After running away from Edinburgh to the highlands, she is now trying to find a way to reunite with her younger sister and stepdaughter. But she is a doctor who will go to any length to heal a person in need and that’s how she meets the dashing Cinaed Mackintosh.

Cinaed Mackintosh was sent away from his clan when he was just a little boy. Since then, he has had to fend for himself. He has made a name for himself as the Son of Scotland smuggling weapons for rebels to help in their fight against the British. But when he has to blow up his ship and get shot while sailing to land, he finds himself in the healing hands of a woman who is just as beautiful as she is gifted at healing. But this woman is not only unique due to her occupation, she is also wanted by the British and has a high price on her head.

A story hat will keep you on the edge of your seat! Mystery, excitement and a sweet and passionate love story. Can’t wait to find out the mystery behind Cinaed’s past and what will become of his and Isabella’s future. A great start to another beautiful series by May McGoldrick.

Thank you Netgalley and St. Martin’s Press for providing this ARC in exchange for an honest review.
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A Historical Romance Gem 🌸

This story is everything I wanted, and it was even better because I love a good Historical! Cinaed is the perfect hero and Isabella is a dream heroine. He is kind, supportive, strong in his ideals, and swoon-worthy. She is fierce, loving, and wonderful! Honestly, the two of them remind me of Claire and Jaime, with a relationship built in consideration, support, and trust...equality, even from the beginning. The build up of slow burn was realistic and I was so in love with every moment. The storyline and plot was believable and unique, the twist that leads into the next book actually surprised me...involving Cinaed. The action was consistent from beginning to end, and I was gripped with interest straight away. Honestly, I read this in less than two days because I could not put it down. It was just SO SO GOOD! The action, charm, danger, romance, plot, and wit was riveting! I cannot wait for the next installment from this husband and wife duo!
1 people found this helpful
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Great start to a new series!

This was the first time I have ever read a book like this. And by that, I mean a Scottish/Highland romance novel. My mom reads similar books all the time and I am so glad this was my first one!

I loved the detail and character development throughout the book. Right away the characters are thrust into action and have to rely on each other, not because they have to, but because they want to. Cinead has to be one of my favorite overall characters ever! There’s just something about him that I am drawn to. The politics of the time don’t override the plot of the novel, which I was super grateful for.

I could go on and on about this book but overall I think everyone should read this! I can’t wait for book #2 to come out in September.
1 people found this helpful