Author Skye Warren is best known for her erotic love scenes, and although this trait is prevalent throughout her Rochester Trilogy series, she concentrates so much more time on developing the character's personalities, behavioral patterns, and thought processes. She invests a great amount of the read on building up a compelling thriller, crime drama and modern romance in this series.
Warren's Rochester Trilogy consists of Private Property, followed by Strict Confidence and concludes with Best Kept Secret. A small footnote is that Warren grabs characters from the trilogy and continues the saga with Hiding Places and 1001 Dark Nights Behind Closed Doors.
There is a film noir quality about the series, with the first book set in an ominous mansion on a cliffside of a quaint town in Maine. The next two books move to a cozy inn by a beach in the town. Warren's description of the mysterious and Gothic atmosphere sets the scene for readers, plunging them into the center of an emotional whirlwind.
Written in first person, veritably each character holds a conversation with the reader, revealing vulnerabilities and well kept secrets to the reader, who enjoys discovering each of their stories. A bond is formed between the reader and the protagonists, Jane Mendoza and Beau Rochester, as Warren weaves into the narration a number of pearls of wisdom about life's lessons and struggles. All of which resonate with the reader, opening a level of human consciousness.
In the vane of Charlotte Brontë's 1847 popular fiction Jane Eyre, whose characters, Jane Eyre, an orphan turned governess, and Edward Fairfax Rochester, a wealthy landowner in North England who is in need of a governess for his ward Adèle, Warren gives this Gothic prose fiction a modern twist in her Rochester Trilogy. Mendoza is hired by Beau Rochester to be a governess to his niece Paige Rochester, whose father is presumably killed in a boat accident along with her mother, who is also believed to have been killed.
Unlike Jane Eyre, Warren's trilogy shares a handful of characters with the reader. This aspect makes the progression of the story easy to follow, while Brontë's tale had the reader moving in various directions with the introduction of many new characters that created tangents along the story. All the characters in Warren's trilogy lead the reader back to Mendoza and Rochester's relationship. Their passion is intense and their strength and will is cavalier.
Warren ends the first two books on cliffhangers, which keeps the reader anxious to discover what happens next. Smartly, she closes the third book of the trilogy with a happily ever after ending that ties all the loose ends and soothes all the mixed emotions to a credible new beginning for the protagonists.
Skye Warren: https://www.skyewarren.com/
There is a film noir quality about the series, with the first book set in an ominous mansion on a cliffside of a quaint town in Maine. The next two books move to a cozy inn by a beach in the town. Warren's description of the mysterious and Gothic atmosphere sets the scene for readers, plunging them into the center of an emotional whirlwind.
Written in first person, veritably each character holds a conversation with the reader, revealing vulnerabilities and well kept secrets to the reader, who enjoys discovering each of their stories. A bond is formed between the reader and the protagonists, Jane Mendoza and Beau Rochester, as Warren weaves into the narration a number of pearls of wisdom about life's lessons and struggles. All of which resonate with the reader, opening a level of human consciousness.
In the vane of Charlotte Brontë's 1847 popular fiction Jane Eyre, whose characters, Jane Eyre, an orphan turned governess, and Edward Fairfax Rochester, a wealthy landowner in North England who is in need of a governess for his ward Adèle, Warren gives this Gothic prose fiction a modern twist in her Rochester Trilogy. Mendoza is hired by Beau Rochester to be a governess to his niece Paige Rochester, whose father is presumably killed in a boat accident along with her mother, who is also believed to have been killed.
Unlike Jane Eyre, Warren's trilogy shares a handful of characters with the reader. This aspect makes the progression of the story easy to follow, while Brontë's tale had the reader moving in various directions with the introduction of many new characters that created tangents along the story. All the characters in Warren's trilogy lead the reader back to Mendoza and Rochester's relationship. Their passion is intense and their strength and will is cavalier.
Warren ends the first two books on cliffhangers, which keeps the reader anxious to discover what happens next. Smartly, she closes the third book of the trilogy with a happily ever after ending that ties all the loose ends and soothes all the mixed emotions to a credible new beginning for the protagonists.
Skye Warren: https://www.skyewarren.com/



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