![]() Of all my books, Dancing At Midnight required the most extensive revisions.I was never particularly attached to this title, though, and in fact had only chosen it because it went along with Splendid. Dancing At Midnight had the working title of Spellbound.This is the witty, delightful second book in Julia Quinn's first ever Regency romance trilogy. But when the harsh light of day replaces the magic of midnight, can this tormented soul learn to love again? If you love the Bridgertons, wait until you discover the Blydons. And even though he knows he can never be the sort of man she deserves, he can’t help wanting her. Suddenly he’s writing bad poetry and climbing trees in the pitch-dark night… just so he can dance with her as the clock strikes midnight. She is intoxicating, infuriating… and she makes him want to live again. Lord John has lived through the worst horrors of war… but nothing could have been as terrifying to his tormented heart as Lady Arabella. During an extended stay in the country, she never expects to meet Lord John Blackwood, a wounded war hero who intrigues her like no other man. When a suitor tells Arabella he’s willing to overlook her appalling bluestocking tendencies on account of her looks and fortune, she decides to take a break from the Marriage Mart. Lady Arabella Blydon has beauty and a brain, and she’s tired of men who can see only one without the other. ![]()
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