The Stolen Mackenzie Bride by Jennifer Ashley

The Stolen Mackenzie Bride (Mackenzies & McBrides, #8)

by Jennifer Ashley

The New York Times bestselling author of Rules for a Proper Governess returns with an engrossing tale that promises to delight lovers of Outlander.

1745, Scotland: The youngest son of the scandalous Mackenzie family, Malcolm is considered too wild to tame…until he meets a woman who is too unattainable to resist.

Lady Mary Lennox is English, her father highly loyal to the king, and promised to another Englishman. But despite it being forbidden to speak to Malcolm, Lady Mary is fascinated by the Scotsman, and stolen moments together lead to a passion greater than she’d ever dreamed of finding.

When fighting breaks out between the Highlanders and the King's army, their plans to elope are thwarted, and it will take all of Malcolm’s daring as a Scottish warrior to survive the battle and steal a wife out from under the noses of the English.

Reviewed by Amanda on

3 of 5 stars

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As much as I've loved Jennifer Ashley's previous historical romance books, The Stolen MacKenzie Bride doesn't live up to the rest of the MacKenzie and McBrides series. It wasn't a bad book, by any means, but it has a few aspects that made it less than exciting.

The instalove between Malcolm and Mary, for one. For a romance novel, instalove is always a hard trope to handle because a) it has to be believable and b) there has to be outside interference to keep them apart.

In this case, Malcolm takes one look at Mary and knows she's the one. Something about the look in her eye or how she acts. Not quite as believable as I would have liked. Mary falls pretty fast too, but only because Malcolm unleashes a side of her she's has to hide. It might have been fine if the book's sole focus had been on their specific love story.

Instead, The Stolen MacKenzie Bride tells a much broader tale about the Scottish uprising and how Malcolm and Mary's story fits in. Pulling the focus away from Malcolm and Mary made it confusing about the end point the story was moving toward.

It wasn't the usual points of most romance novels, and without a clear end point, it lacked tension to push the book forward. (Which made the book easy to put down.) Especially when the events of the book span quite a long time frame, skipping over long periods of time, resulting in more summaries than I usually prefer.

Despite that, it was interesting to visit another time frame. It rather makes me want to reread the entire series now.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 7 April, 2016: Finished reading
  • 7 April, 2016: Reviewed