Trying out for the local adult-themed Shakespearean production seems simple, but there’s a catch. Michael must woo the notoriously demanding lead actress, Rachel Hewitt, thereby freeing his friend to pursue a courtship of Rachel’s sister.
Rachel hates the thought of handing over the lead role in her admittedly scandalous troupe to someone so wholly uneducated in the ways of the Great Bard. But she’s in a bind, and the only one who can step up is a man who looks way too good in a codpiece - and knows it.
To add insult to injury, he refuses to take the role until she agrees to take his place in some barbaric warrior race. She’ll do it, but not with a smile. Unfortunately, the hardest part isn’t antagonizing her Scottish foes. It’s resisting the one man who seems determined to line and cue her heart - forever.
Review:
The World is a Stage is the 2nd book in Tamara
Morgan’s Games of Love series and just as a absolutely loved the 1st
book, Love is a Battlefield, this book was no different.
Michael O’Leary, looooove him! He has such a laid back
personality and he uses jokes (often crude jokes) to lighten a tense
situations. He is easy going, is able to enter into a situation with his eyes
open and doesn’t seem to miss anything. He is very easy to like and fall for J He is part of a team
that competes in The Scottish Highland Games, but struggles with a bad knee. But
there is much more to Michael then his joking personality and being an athlete.
Rachel Hewitt, her sister Molly are members of a production
team that performs adult-themed Shakespeare, as Michael refers to it. Rachel is
a pretty hoity person at first glance. She doesn’t seem very approachable and
scowls a lot (well, at Michael anyway lol). Rachel didn’t grow up with a very
good role model for relationships. She carries a lot of guilt for not being
home to help her sister through a difficult time. Therefore, Rachel has made it
her duty to prevent Molly from getting into potentially bad relationships, and
Molly is currently dating Michael’s friend Eric Peterson. And Michael is
recruited to help distract Rachel from interfering into their relationship.
I’ll be honest I really wanted to smack Rachel, often. Now,
she has a history that has led her to take the actions she does, and even
though she opens up more while hanging out with Michael, I feel Tamara did a
great job portraying how easy it is to resort to impulse decisions and take
backward steps when scared. Rachel definitely redeemed herself by the end,
thankfully. Michael is such a giving person, always helping his friends out and
very good at seeing the good in people. Michael takes challenges and is able to
turn it around into a positive, such as when he destroys his knee and can’t
participate in competitions anymore. I really just can’t get over how much I
love his character. I really like how the characters in Tamara’s books are
“real”. Now I do normally tend to read paranormal/fantasy genres but I find
that these books are refreshing, light, and realistic with the characters she
creates and the conflicts they encounter.
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