Friday, May 10, 2019

Lucky's Lady Book Review: Tami Hoag Mysterious Romance

Tami Hoag's book "The Lady of Luck" is slightly different from her previous novels, but it's absolutely fun, allowing readers to enter a world that is often explored: Louisiana's remote areas or Cajun Bayous! Here are my comments on Tami Hoag's lucky lady.

Main characters:

Serena Sheridan from

 : Successful psychiatrist from Charleston returns to Louisiana

Lucky Doucet from

 : A mysterious and potentially dangerous Cajun that most people worry about

Shelby from

 :Serena's sister, she has never been with her.

Gifford Sheridan from

 : Serena's grandfather, owns a large ancestral home that a chemical company is trying to buy.

plot:: She was faced with an unforeseen problem when Serena Sheridan returned to her ancestral home to rest in psychiatric treatment in Charleston, South Carolina. Her grandmother left his home and moved into the estuary of Louisiana, where he raised a small boat to fish and hunt.

He seems unable to deal with the financial issues surrounding his family and business and the prospect of selling it to large chemical companies that want to build factories on their properties. Of course, her sister, I hope he sells so that she can get money to help advance her husband's political dreams.

Serena must venture into the estuary, and the only person who can get her there is a dark character named Lucky Doucet. Fortunately, the reputation is very poor. It seems that no one has much knowledge of him. Apart from living in the estuary, the locals are very scared.

Lucky and Serena will soon learn to respect each other and respect each other, which will become an unusual love story. Fortunately, the result is not a dangerous criminal, but more of a estuary protector and a person living there. He does not allow poachers and those who want to hurt the estuary.

Fortunately, he had his own demon, he had to deal with it, and at the same time tried to help Serena to convince her father not to sell the property.

I like the way Tami Hoag describes the estuary, you really think you are on a canoe and cross the estuary. Lucky's conversation is Cajun French, making this book feel real and romantic. There is even a vocabulary on the back of the translated French phrase, so you know exactly what Lucky is talking about!

Lucky ladies are full of mystery, movement, conspiracy and many romances. I often read mystery and crime novels, but found this to be a refreshing break intertwined with an unusual love story. I really like this book and think that most female fans of Tami Hoag will like this book.

For men, there may be too much romance, but I don't personally mind and will reread the book in the future. Overall, this 342 page is a page flip and a very enjoyable reading from the cover to the cover.




Orignal From: Lucky's Lady Book Review: Tami Hoag Mysterious Romance

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