Historical Romance: Blood Queen (Historical Romance Books, Historical Romance Novella, Historical Romance Kindle Books, Romance Novels With Sex), by Nathaniel Eastwood
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Historical Romance: Blood Queen (Historical Romance Books, Historical Romance Novella, Historical Romance Kindle Books, Romance Novels With Sex), by Nathaniel Eastwood
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1125 Henry II returns to England with his agreement for peace with France. Henry’s wife Eleanor of Aquitaine, welcomes Henry and eagerly awaits his news. If England has made treaty with France, England will enjoy victory over Europe for many years, and Eleanor will ensure her position in court in England. The royal court is taken by surprise by an enemy and Eleanor is stolen away to a foreign land. She meets the mysterious warrior, Wolfram, who spirits Eleanor back to England and Henry. Wolfram is promised a title, fiefs, and a province in England as Henry’s reward. Yet Wolfram would give all of it away to have one glorious night of love, with Eleanor. Except Henry has welcomed Wolfram to court to keep him near. Henry knows Wolfram is not who he pretends and the King plots to reveal Wolfram’s true plan to overthrow England for France, Young Morgan Le Faye, arrives at Henry II’s court along with an entourage of indentured servants, promised to serve the royal order. When Eleanor is captured, the court learns Morgan has the gift of foresight. She is groomed to serve the crown and to become Eleanor’s and the King’s advisor. Eleanor fears more trouble soon may come to England—and she is right—an ancient evil is threatening to sweep through the land. Merland of Briton is summoned to cleanse the royal court of sudden illnesses, night fevers, and ghosts that prowl the royal castle walls. Morgan discovers the pact Henry made with France for peace is a curse. Philip II of France arranged for Eleanor’s abduction and to place Wolfram in Henry’s graces so France is first to learn every plan England makes… King Henry is besotted with young, beautiful Morgan and he demands she wed him. Eleanor will not give Henry sons, and the King believes Morgan will is his secret to ultimate power. Merland warns Morgan to not marry Henry or a monstrous evil power will help enemies to usurp Henry, overtake the country and turn England into a monstrous land that will destroy the innocent and dominate the Old World. Excerpt Henry gazed upon Morgan. “You are a magnificent,” Henry said. “Your dark golden tresses, your honey scented skin and ruby red lips… Morgan you have bewitched me. I want nothing except to bequeath you your heart’s desire.” Morgan stood. “My Lord, please.” “Touch your hand to my heart,” Henry said, grabbing hold of Morgan’s hand as he held her over his chest. “Feel how it beats.” Morgan could feel Henry’s heartbeat. While she could see her benefactress bedridden behind the King. Lady Eleanor had seen Morgan through the most horrific moments since she had found her in the French glade. How could Morgan think of doing or speaking anything against Eleanor when she had opened her heart and the Henry’s castle to her? “My King, you must let me go to my Queen,” begged Morgan. “She is tainted with fever. The herbs I am ministering are helping,” Morgan pulled away from Henry and rubbed more of the lavender and myrrh gently onto Lady Eleanor. “You, Morgan, have lessened the Queen’s fever?” Henry said. Morgan nodded. “You have knowledge of healing, knowing learned by sages, or witches,” stated Henry. “My Lord?” Henry yanked Morgan to stand in front of him. “Is this why you have come to court? To test the crown’s resolve? To bring the royal seal to its knees?” Morgan struggled against Henry’s chest. Their bodies collided, and Morgan felt the King’s very large member snaking near her thigh. “My King, I have pledged my allegiance to the crown, to you,” pleaded Morgan. “That’s right. I am your King. Your duty is to do whatever I ask—“ Henry bent his lips to taste Morgan. She bit Henry’s lip as she flinched. “You little wench—“ Henry raised his hand to Morgan. She threw her hands up and Henry slapped them away. Henry thrust his arms under Morgan’s dress and inched his hands over her breasts. “You would deny your King? Let me show you the delights of honoring your future husband—“
Historical Romance: Blood Queen (Historical Romance Books, Historical Romance Novella, Historical Romance Kindle Books, Romance Novels With Sex), by Nathaniel Eastwood- Amazon Sales Rank: #1055611 in eBooks
- Published on: 2015-03-10
- Released on: 2015-03-10
- Format: Kindle eBook
Where to Download Historical Romance: Blood Queen (Historical Romance Books, Historical Romance Novella, Historical Romance Kindle Books, Romance Novels With Sex), by Nathaniel Eastwood
Most helpful customer reviews
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful. Don't bother By Misfit The blurb on this gives the entire *story* away, so there will be no recap in this review. About that blurb - according to that Henry and Eleanor's story begins in 1125. Wiki says Henry was born in 1133, and I have no idea if the author is just making this stuff up as he goes along, thinks he knows this period and has no idea how far off he is, or is writing alternative history. I just don't know, but from looking at the other reviews on the book page, I am definitely in the minority.*shrugs*"The four soldiers on horses entered the lands of Normandy to the blare of trumpets and song. Villagers living around the castle bowed to greet Henry II, Saxon ruler of Normandy."Well, he wouldn't be Henry II of England until he's crowned king in England. I have no idea what Normandy is doing with a Saxon ruler, but I thought Henry was Duke of Normandy. I could be wrong, wouldn't be the first time."They're only care, for Henry, sovereign and ruler of Normandy, Wales, and the outer lying provinces of Scotland."Well, another new title for Henry. The man gets around. And shouldn't it be their?"The servants and maidservants bowed their heads. Henry neared the young maidservant as the young maiden averted her gaze from Henry. His manhood was arched regally and prominent, the maiden was unaccustomed to the King revealing his physical gifts to those in his circle."!!!!"If Eleanor didn't, she would never find out why she was betrothed to the viper of a man who had slayed her first husband, William."Her first husband was William? I thought she was first married to Louis..."She was Eleanor of Aquitaine, daughter and heir to the richest land and provinces in France. Eleanor belonged to no man, except one. She raced by horseback to see her father, King Phillip....I defer to those with more knowledge of all things Eleanor, but Wiki says her father was William and I'm pretty sure he was duke of his duchy and not king, and I don't think the duchy was considered part of France back in the days...Oh, and did I tell you all the name of Henry's castle in his Saxon kingdom in Normandy? "Castle Wyvern". Google that, I dare ya.Now we toss in a band of nasty Norsemen from Scandinavia (!!) bent on capturing Eleanor, plus an appearance later in the story of remarkably well preserved Morgan le Fey and Merland (sic) the Magician, plus there's a reference to Joan of Arc's fate (!!). At this point we're all over the map and it gets weirder and weirder and the grammatical errors are flying fast and furious."You are, my wife!"good, you're color is returning..."Isle of Briton"Isn't that Britain?"I, will produce and heir.""What was this prayer you gave?" Wolfram said. "That the Lord or Father would send our deliverer."*spoiler ahead*I think I've punished everyone enough. Don't bother, not even at the freebie price is this worth it. Worse news - the story isn't over. Sounds like there's going to be a sequel since at the end Henry divorces Eleanor with a snap of his fingers (Henry VIII should have taken lessons from him) and marries le Fey.
9 of 12 people found the following review helpful. Eleanor of Aquitaine, Henry II, and Tina Fey's Younger Sister Morgan By The Just-About-Average Ms. M This is an unbelievable bit of writing, I must say. How anyone could cram such an avalanche of grammatical errors, misused punctuation, wrong word choices, and every other imaginable assault on the English language in 79 puny Kindle pages is astonishing. How those same 79 pages could contain one of the worst excuses for a “novelette” in any recognizable genre is equally mind-boggling. This mess, this horrible assault on the intellectual sensibilities of any reader over the age of six purports to be a “historical romance,” but it most assuredly is not a romance, nor has it the slightest claim whatever to anything remotely historical.I suppose one of the most singular features of this book is the number of glowing reviews. How on earth could anyone overlook the atrocious writing and grammar and gush about what a wonderful read this was? Perhaps, judging from the generic words and phrases used to describe this terrible waste of Kindle space, these folks didn’t actually read the 79 pages.I read the entire thing, painful though it was. Let’s deal with the alleged history first:Eleanor of Aquitaine was the daughter of Duke Guillaume [William] of Aquitaine. Her first husband was Louis VII, king of France, whom she married at age 13. Their marriage was annulled in 1152, and she married Henry, then count of Anjou and duke of Normandy, that same year. Henry became king of England in 1154.Henry II did not have a drop of Saxon blood in his veins. Not. One. There is a lot one can say about Henry, but sitting on his throne naked for the delectation of various serving girls is not one of them. Nor are any of the other deliberately salacious goings-on poor Henry is forced to endure in these benighted 79 Kindle pages.Joan of Arc was burned at the stake for heresy in May 1430, so that ridiculous nun, Sister Reina, could not have said Morgan was like her. Surely the fact that nearly two centuries separate Eleanor’s and Henry’s shenanigans and Joan’s martyrdom would have been noticed by the folks just loving this story? Or perhaps not...The decision to throw in completely incorrect depictions of alleged Norsemen was as misguided as everything else, but at least one should know something about them. That would be as easy as catching a few episodes of The Vikings on the History Channel.And finally, the bizarre pairing of Eleanor with “Morgan Le Fey” and the introduction of someone named “Merland” does nothing but induce an outburst of incredulous laughter. Perhaps the lovely Morgan is indeed Tina Fey’s younger sister. I’m betting the author of this mess actually didn’t know how to spell “Merlin.” And so we get a bit of risible fantasy thrown into the mix, thus making it worse than before. Wait—that is simply not possible.There are no fewer than a dozen examples of horrible writing on every page. Too many for me to bother with. Just check out the “Look Inside” feature and you’ll see enough to deter you from reading further.This 79 Kindle pages masquerading as a novel/novelette/novella was free, which after having read it, I decided was far too much to pay. And like one reviewer said, I did read this nonsense in one sitting, which is good, since the very idea of wasting another nanosecond on this drivel is nauseating.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. One Star By Nancyh1955 Boring, boring, boring.....
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