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karlabrandenburg 's review for:
Moonlight Madness
by Sandra Jones
Tess has taken her high school students on a field trip to England for an in depth view of Shakespeare, but one problem student is causing trouble not only for her, but for the rest of the students. Tess's soft spot for the young boy's troubles lead her to begin adoption proceedings to provide him with e better life.
Rance is wary of the henge on his new property, a dismal gift from the king of England. Highly superstitious, he tries to avoid the "white witches's pit," unsuccessfully. It transports him to the future, where he must find his soul mate in order to return to save his daughter from being used as a political pawn.
When Rance meets Tess, he's convinced she is his salvation, but a medieval knight in modern day England stands out rather oddly. He must convince her, regardless of the consequences, to return to the stone circle with him.
The author has put a lot of work into this novel. The plots and subplots weave together well and the stakes for all parties are high. Each of the characters has too much at stake to compromise, and yet the reader arrives at happily ever after. I struggled in the first chapter, Not understanding who Rance was with, and that kind of stuck with me throughout the story. I figured it out later on, but initially, it was just confusing. And the mystery about Matthias and Carrie was not explained. Evidently they'd been through the stones, but we never find out why and how. Maybe they will get their own story. There wasn't anything really wrong or bad about this story, it just didn't resonate with me. I never really got to like Rance.
Rance is wary of the henge on his new property, a dismal gift from the king of England. Highly superstitious, he tries to avoid the "white witches's pit," unsuccessfully. It transports him to the future, where he must find his soul mate in order to return to save his daughter from being used as a political pawn.
When Rance meets Tess, he's convinced she is his salvation, but a medieval knight in modern day England stands out rather oddly. He must convince her, regardless of the consequences, to return to the stone circle with him.
The author has put a lot of work into this novel. The plots and subplots weave together well and the stakes for all parties are high. Each of the characters has too much at stake to compromise, and yet the reader arrives at happily ever after. I struggled in the first chapter, Not understanding who Rance was with, and that kind of stuck with me throughout the story. I figured it out later on, but initially, it was just confusing. And the mystery about Matthias and Carrie was not explained. Evidently they'd been through the stones, but we never find out why and how. Maybe they will get their own story. There wasn't anything really wrong or bad about this story, it just didn't resonate with me. I never really got to like Rance.