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Member Reviews

Well, another Chance falls in spectacular and lovely fashion. Leopold loves archery-it is his passion. When Kathleen corners him into teaching her, it begins their journey, full of scandal, pain, family tension and love…so much love. I adored how Leopold has such a soft demeanor and hurt that he felt he had to be perfect in his father’s eyes. Kathleen is trying to protect her sister, and support her when their father disowned them . I wish the villain at the Archery club would have gotten a comeuppance , but I guess what he did get must do. And then there is Lady Romeril- doing what she does best- insert herself in something not her business and gladly so! I think the most precious scene ( aside from the epilogue) was between Leopold and his father-very touching. Misunderstandings abound in this tale, but the HEA is so very lovely!

I received this story for free and these are my own views.

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Entertaining Read.

Another great storyline in the Chance series!

I loved how Archery was portrayed within this romance and the witty lines just kept me laughing.

A really joyous fun read full of emotion, family, chemistry, romance and love!

Looking forward to the next installment of this highly recommended series!

I voluntarily read and reviewed this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

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Kathleen is in London with her disgraced sister when she spies Leo at his Archery Club. Flirting with him, she asks him to teach her archery. Though love at first sight, they are not in the same class. I kept waiting for a conflict to happen in this story, and when it did it was not very strong. I was disturbed by the amount of archery puns there were throughout the book. I received an ARC from NetGalley and Dragonblade Publishing for my honest review.

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To me 3 stars marks a book that I enjoyed reading but wouldn't reread. I found the story sweet. Some of my favourite parts was how part of this book was an ode to archery and the other half an ode to love. From this book you could clearly tell the author had done research which was appreciated. I find that too many inaccuracies pull me out of the book and make it impossible to read. However if you read this book there are instances where the writing pulls you out of the year of 1840. Mostly when it comes to language. Finally nothing turns me off of a book more than a lack of consent. I was impressed in this book with how robust the consent is.

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Every single book in the " Chance" series touches a different part of my soul. The previous installment, it was the mental health representation, this one it was my favorite tropes all at once. A Sporting Chance is a gem.

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