Lady in the Tower, Elizabeth Rose
Lady in the Tower, Elizabeth Rose
List: $19.95 | Sale: $13.97
Club: $9.97

Lady in the Tower
A Retelling of Rapunzel

Author: Elizabeth Rose

Narrator: Brian J. Gill

Unabridged: 5 hr 43 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/01/2018

Categories: Fiction, Fantasy, Romance


Synopsis

♥ Sometimes a prison is a state of mind, and not a physical place.♥The Lady Captive:Rapunzel de Bar has been kidnapped by the old witch Hecuba, and imprisoned in a tower with no doors and only one window. Tired of waiting for her brothers to rescue her, Rapunzel decides to escape on her own. Since she's been cursed, her hair keeps growing longer and longer. She hangs from her braid out the window, and with her eyes closed, cuts her hair, dropping to the ground.The Dragon Lord:Marco Drago del Rossi III is bounty hunting when a woman falls from the sky and knocks him off his horse, causing him to lose the man he tracked, as well as his reward money. Son of a dragon lord, and because of a troubled past, Marco doesn't have the confidence to command a fiery beast, and neither does he know how. Instead, he has opted to do other things to make a living. Now, this beautiful woman is asking him to help her escape an evil witch, offering him money to do it. Not easily done, since the girl is cursed and her hair holds on to things, keeping her from leaving when she has any connection to the ground.Can two troubled people find happiness amongst the turmoil that magic has caused in their lives? Escaping the witch this time won't be easy, and breaking the curse might be impossible. Marco will have to risk everything for the girl he has lost his heart to. Love knows no bounds, and sometimes a prison is not physical, but instead, self-made.

About Elizabeth Rose

Elizabeth Rose is the author of medieval, paranormal, fantasy western, and contemporary novels. While based on romance, her novels have complex plots, action and suspense. She loves writing bad boy tortured heroes and empowered feisty heroines.

She has been a Sapphire Award finalist and been nominated by Romantic Times for a Reviewer's Choice Award. She is a multi-time RONE Award Finalist, and also a Wishing Shelf Awards, Raven Awards, and International Digital Awards Finalist. She also won the Raven Awards for her book, Highland Spirit.

Elizabeth has been a freelance artist and photographer and has designed nearly all her own book covers.

She enjoys gardening and sitting in her writing hammock in her secret garden during the summer to write her many books.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Gary on May 26, 2022

Anne Boleyn was the second and most famous of Henry VIII's six wives. Henry's determination to marry her, in part, led to the separation of the Church of England from the Roman Catholic Church. Another reason was that Henry wanted the wealth of the Church in his own hands being a greedy grasping man. T......more

Goodreads review by Skye on October 10, 2017

First I'd like to thank my good friend Marian for sending her copy from Canada; she is the expert on the Tudor time frame. This is a wonderful perspective of Anne Boleyn, King Henry VIII's most notorious wife. Jean Plaidy presents a fictional version of Anne, told by Anne's point of view in epistolar......more

Goodreads review by Clau on August 29, 2021

Ana Bolena la dama de la torre es uno de mis libros favoritos desde siempre. Lo amé lo primera vez que lo leí hace casi 10 años y en esta relectura lo amé más. Sois vos, Ana Bolena. Me habéis atormentado desde el momento en que puse mis ojos sobre vos por primera vez Este libro se centra exclusivament......more

Goodreads review by Lois on June 24, 2019

This was ok. Lots of weirdly incorrect facts but this was written in the 80's so I'm not sure how much of what is now common knowledge was in the 80's.......more

Goodreads review by Arleigh on December 16, 2012

This is the book that started my obsession with Jean Plaidy–the first of her novels I read and my absolute favorite characterization of Anne Boleyn. Eight years have passed, and reading it again I stand by my initial delight in finding an admirable protagonist in Anne–after having been introduced to......more