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The Bartered Bride
 
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The Bartered Bride [Audiobook] [MP3 Audio] [Unabridged] (MP3 CD)

de Mary Jo Putney (Author), Michael Page (Reader)
3.5étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (13 évaluations de client)
Prix éditeur: CDN$ 54.95
Price: CDN$ 34.62 & se qualifie pour Livraison super-économique GRATUITE pour des commandes de plus de CDN$ 39. Détails
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Vendu et expédié par Amazon.ca.

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Descriptions du produit

From Amazon.com

Setting: The East Indies and London, 1834

Sensuality: 7

Lovely widow Alexandra Warren and her young daughter are sailing from Australia to the haven of her family in London when pirates attack their ship and they are captured, separated, and Alex is sold into slavery. Six months later, Captain Gavin Elliott drops anchor at the island of Maduri and is shocked to find a European woman being auctioned in the slave market. Alex clings to hope when the handsome sea captain offers to buy her, but the ruling Sultan of Maduri has plans for Gavin and shrewdly views Alex's plight as a means to control him. Through strength, courage, and wisdom, Gavin thwarts the Sultan's plans, but after surviving the dangers of the South Seas, Alex and Gavin are faced with a more lethal threat when they arrive in London. This time, whether either of them will survive the evil that threatens their lives is anyone's guess.

The exotic locale of the East Indies contrasts vividly with polite London society in this third tale in Ms. Putney's trilogy (The Wild Child and The China Bride). The plot has enough twists and turns to satisfy the most devoted of mystery fans while the relationship between hero and heroine is complicated and the secondary characters well drawn. The author's exploration of British politics, slavery in the 1830s, and London society adds depth and texture to the novel. --Lois Faye Dyer --Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.



From Publishers Weekly

This final volume in a popular trilogy (The Wild Child; The China Bride) is a rich and realistic 19th-century historical romance. Gavin Elliott, captain of his trading company's flagship, has been traveling the East Indies since the death of his young wife and infant daughter. Alexandra Warren, too, is widowed; soon after she and her daughter leave Australia for England, their ship is taken by Malaysian pirates and she is abducted. When Gavin visits Malaysia as the guest of a local sultan, he sees Alexandra on the block at a slave auction. As soon as he sets eyes on the indomitable Englishwoman, their fates are united. After a series of trials (including wrestling a giant lizard), Gavin is allowed to bring Alexandra back to England, but their worst problems are not yet behind them. Putney knows how to create characters attractive enough to enchant readers without being too good to be true. Gavin is gallant and romantic¢he risks his life for a woman he doesn't know, marries her to protect her reputation and understands her physical reticence after her traumatic experience¢but he is not without doubts and desires. Alexandra, for her part, believes that Gavin helps her out of chivalry, but she is too gracious and too aware of her position to reject his aid. Both characters have vivid inner lives and thoroughly imagined personalities. Their union is inevitable¢this is a romance novel¢but their journey from strangers to spouses to true lovers is utterly authentic.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.

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L'avis des consommateurs

13 évaluations
5 étoiles:
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4 étoiles:
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3 étoiles:
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2 étoiles:
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1 étoiles:
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Évaluation du client type
3.5étoiles sur 5 (13 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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1 internautes sur 1 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
5.0étoiles sur 5 A Bargain At Any Price, Avril 30 2002
This review is from: The Bartered Bride (Hardcover)
Alexandra Warren left England as a young bride, eager to experience the adventures of a military wife whose husband was stationed in Australia -- that far-off continent Alex thought to be a grand and romantic place. More than a decade later, she sets sail for her homeland as a widow and a mother of an eight-year old daughter, her perspective tainted by the reality of living in Australia and of losing her husband to a shockingly aggressive fever. Although theirs was not a perfect marriage, Alex still grieves for the loss of companionship.

Her daughter, Katie, is a godsend in that respect. Every mother's nightmare is about to come true, however, when the ship they are traveling on is attacked by pirates off the coast of Maduri. A bitterly short battle ensues; while Alex and her daughter wait in their cabin below, the crew of the Amstel abandons ship, leaving the lone female occupants to their grim fate with a cowardly lack of conscience. Slavery is a fact of life on this island in the East Indies. After a desperate struggle, mother and daughter are separated and sold on Maduri, their disparate fates a cruel blessing.

Six months later, an American sea captain weighs anchor in Maduri Harbor. Gavin Elliott has cargo onboard his ship for Sultan Kasan, ruler of this deceptively beautiful island. Kasan has plans for Gavin and his shipping company, Elliott House, a partnership of sorts the Sultan would like to form with it. A tour of the island is meant to persuade Gavin to accept the Sultan's lucrative proposition. Instead, Gavin stumbles upon a slave market where a distinctly European woman is being auctioned off. Appalled, he offers to buy the woman, only to grant the Sultan leverage in a dangerous game where more than one life is at stake.

Honor demands that Gavin stay in Maduri and obtain Alexandra's freedom, whatever the cost. The price of a woman's freedom is high indeed, however. Is Gavin willing to risk his own freedom to release Alex from her damnable fate, to help erase the haunted look from her shimmering, aqua eyes? It's miraculous she has endured life as a slave for as long as she has. Clearly, Gavin must barter with the devil -- and dance to his merry tune -- before Alex's fate can be settled and her daughter found. If they need to scour the world, so be it!

Emotionally fragile Alex has endured hell on earth while in captivity. Her emotional and mental scars run deep, so deep in fact that the thought of intimacy terrifies her. Mary Jo Putney executes these emotional highs and lows with achingly accurate precision. A reader shares Alex's sense of defilement and desperation, and celebrates her indomitable will and ability to endure what could easily shatter a person's soul. Needless to say, Ms. Putney's characterizations are riveting and multi-layered. Her prose is equally textured, and her plot is daringly different. A reader risks emotional devastation along with the heroine, however. THE BARTERED BRIDE is brutally intense on so many levels; it's difficult to remain unaffected by it.

For instance, Gavin and Alex's first physical encounter is devastating and controversial. I've purposefully refrained from revealing more as Ms. Putney has made an obvious choice to shock and disturb her readers, to make an emotional investment in this novel impossible to avoid. Gavin's heroic behaviour is tainted somewhat by the necessity of this act. However, time heals all wounds. Alex is gradually able to overcome her past, to forgive the actions initiated by Sultan Kasan and Gavin's part in fulfilling them. Like a bad memory, the encounter slowly fades from a reader's mind, and a beautifully unfolding love story takes its place.

Both Alex and Gavin are amazingly resilient, complex characters. They marry to stave off a possible scandal upon Alex's return to England, and Gavin's as well. No common marriage, this. A widower himself, Gavin is reluctant to settle for a lukewarm commitment from his wife. He's remarkably patient with Alex, though: a noble man through and through. THE BARTERED BRIDE is filled to brimming with such noble and richly detailed characters. Exotic locales, meticulous research and a haunting humanity complete this novel. Alex and Gavin have more monsters yet to face, but their bond is one that adversity can only strengthen, not destroy.

Ms. Putney is an author of daring, fortitude and fearlessness. THE BARTERED BRIDE is a bargain at any price. It's an evocative and alluring love story that grief and sorrow only sharpen into stunning relief.

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3.0étoiles sur 5 Left me wanting something else, Nov. 11 2002
Par Tanya L. Schaub "TSchlaack" (Livermore, Maine USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
I am usually a huge fan of Mary Jo Putney but this particular book left me wanting more. One of the issues is that the first chapter is actually near the end of the story. This sort of tells you what things are leading up to. This for some reason really annoyed me.

Another issue was that while the book was unabridged by tape 5 I found myself skipping parts that seemed to have no bearing on the story as I thought it was dragging on and on and not going anywhere fast.

In this story you learn about Alex who was taken prisoner (along with her daughter) while sailing home from Australia to England. Along comes Gavin 6 months later and sees Alex up for auction at a slave market in the East Indies. He tries to buy her but the Sultan know what he wants and makes him win her instead, yes the last item in the game is easy to figure out is going to happen.

Then they find her daughter and eventually get married along the way there is fires, murders, dishonesty, brutal rapes, unexpected inheritance, deception, an almost hanging etc...

I still recommend the book but I wouldn't put it on my top 10.

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4.0étoiles sur 5 Exciting adventure with emotional depth, Aoû 14 2002
This review is from: The Bartered Bride (Hardcover)
When returning to England from Australia, Alexandra Warren's ship is attacked by pirates and she is separated from her daughter and sold into slavery. Her constant rebellions lead to her being resold where she is sighted by handsome American merchant Gavin Elliott. Elliott can't stand by when a 'woman of his own people' is enslaved and agrees to undertake a deadly challenge to save her...

Author Mary Jo Putney writes a compelling and emotionally powerful novel filled with action and adventure. THE BARTERED BRIDE is strongest when set in Indonesia... Putney handles the emotional damage done by Alexandra's captivity and brutalization perfectly...

The English component of THE BARTERED BRIDE is still fine adventure. Still, the motivations for Alexandra's kidnappers to hold her alive seems stretched. For me, this reduced the emotional impact of the adventurous ending.

Minor quibbles aside, THE BARTERED BRIDE is an exciting and emotionally compelling story--and a fine addition to the Putney series of east/west romances.

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Commentaires client les plus récents

1.0étoiles sur 5 Going back to what was!
I opened the book and read the Prologue entitled The End Game dated Autumn 1835 Place The Tower of London

Gavin Elliott is being held for trial, he is accused (falsely, of... Read more

Publié le Juil 18 2004

5.0étoiles sur 5 WHY did it take me so long to discover this AWESOME author?
Okay, I have to share right off the bat, this is my first Mary Jo Putney book. How this writer escaped me, I'll never know. Read more
Publié le Aoû 5 2002 par M. Bradley

4.0étoiles sur 5 A little dry, but still good.
I agree with other reviewers who discussed the lack of written emotion in this novel. In fact, I considered it as I read it and noticed that as the novel progresses, so to the... Read more
Publié le Juil 29 2002 par M. Barrera

3.0étoiles sur 5 Great Expectations Unfulfilled
I must say that I agree with the previous reviewers who expressed disappointment in this latest effort by Mary Jo Putney. Read more
Publié le Juil 11 2002

2.0étoiles sur 5 What Has Happened to Mary Jo Putney?
Mary Jo Putney used to be one of my all time favorites because her characters who had depth. Like many readers, I reread books because I fall in love with the men and women. Read more
Publié le Mai 29 2002 par lovesbooks

3.0étoiles sur 5 Disappointed Again
My favorite Mary Jo Putney books are about characters fighting their own flaws(Rake and the Reformer). Read more
Publié le Mai 15 2002 par Irene McHugh

2.0étoiles sur 5 Disappointing
I'm a big fan of Mary Jo Putney, having most recently finished the China Bride (which I heartily recommend), but this book seems contrived to me. Read more
Publié le Mai 8 2002 par dreamweaver25

5.0étoiles sur 5 Puntey never disappoints
Gavin, the owner and captain of a shipping line, first sees Alexandra when she has been put up for sale as a slave on an East Indies island. Read more
Publié le Mai 8 2002 par Joan Monica Wanat

4.0étoiles sur 5 action-packed historical romance
In 1834, American sea merchant Gavin Elliot sets sail from The East Indies for London after making his fortune in trade. Read more
Publié le Mai 4 2002 par Harriet Klausner

5.0étoiles sur 5 The Bartered Bride
THE BARTERED BRIDE is worth every penny. I couldn't put it down. If you haven't read WILD CHILD and CHINA BRIDE be sure to check them out. Read more
Publié le Avril 30 2002 par Suzanne Coleburn

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