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Alexander's "The Trouble with Charlotte" and Carlyle's "Much Ado About Twelfth Night" are both predictable confections full of stock characters who don't leave much of an impression. Unfortunately, this premise proves too limiting, as the formulaic offerings tend to meld in the reader's mind. As the title suggests, all four of the novellas focus on couples who have broken up for some reason or another-usually due to a minor misunderstanding, scheming parents or a simple failure to say "I love you"-but who are given a second chance at love. Four of the brightest historical romance authors writing today serve up stories of lovers reunited in this somewhat patchy collection of Regencies.
