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The Lyndon Sisters

This series plunges into a whirlwind of passion, intrigue, and unexpected twists within the lives of the Lyndon sisters. Each story explores the complexities of societal expectations, forbidden love, and the enduring strength of family bonds. Readers can anticipate romantic adventures filled with danger, misunderstandings, and powerful emotions, where love battles prejudice and social barriers. Follow these women as they strive to find their place in the world and happiness against all odds.

Brighter Than the Sun
Everything and the Moon

Recommended Reading Order

  1. Everything and the Moon

    • 384 pages
    • 14 hours of reading

    It was indisputably love at first sight. But Victoria Lyndon was merely the teenaged daughter of a vicar. . .while Robert Kemble was the dashing young earl of Macclesfield. Surely what their meddlesome fathers insisted must have been true-that he was a reckless seducer determined to destroy her innocence. . . and she was a shameless fortune hunter. So it most certainly was for the best when their plans to elope went hopelessly awry. Even after a seven-year separation, Victoria-now a governess-still leaves Robert breathless. But how could he ever again trust the raven-haired deceiver who had shattered his soul? And Victoria could never give her heart a second time to the cad who so callously trampled on it the first. But a passion fated will not be denied, and vows of love yearn to be kept. . . even when one promises the moon.

    Everything and the Moon1
    3.8
  2. Brighter Than the Sun

    • 384 pages
    • 14 hours of reading

    Charles Wycombe, the dashing - if incorrigible - Earl of Billington, needs a bride before his upcoming 30th birthday, if he hopes to earn his inheritance. The vicar′s vivacious, determined daughter, Miss Eleanor Lyndon, needs a new home, since her father′s insufferable fiancee is making her old one intolerable. Destinly has brought Charles and Ellie together - though their match at the outset appears to have been made somewhere rather hotter than heaven

    Brighter Than the Sun2
    3.9