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1) Dora Thorne
Though acclaimed romance novelist Charlotte M. Brame penned hundreds of short stories and book-length tales over the course of her illustrious literary career, fans and critics alike regard Dora Thorne as her most popular creation. This epic tale centers around romance that blooms among partners of different social classes. Is lasting love possible when the social pressure to say goodbye is so intense? Read Dora Thorne to find out.
...2) Coralie
One of the most prolific romance writers of her era, Charlotte M. Brame produced hundreds of stories pertaining to love in all its many guises. "Coralie" highlights many of Brame's strengths as an author, including her insistence on highly moral tales, her gift for evocative descriptions, and her ability to create indelible, realistic characters and situations.
Fans of historical romance will relish this juicy tale of kidnapping, mistaken identities, and revenge. It begins with an intriguing frame story set in the English countryside, then skips forward several decades to detail several intertwined story lines. When readers find out how these two seemingly unrelated tales are connected, the fireworks really begin. It's a slow-burning page-turner that you won't be able to put down.
5) A Mad Love
Under a variety of pen names, author Charlotte M. Brame wrote hundreds of romance short stories and novels in the mid- to late-nineteenth century. A Mad Love is a wonderful tale of against-all-odds romance that will enthrall fans of classic Victorian-era love stories.
Shadows figure heavily in romance writer Charlotte M. Brame's body of work. Deeply concerned with the morality of romance and interpersonal relationships, Brame displays an acute understanding of the way that past misdeeds can cast a pall over even the most pure and innocent love and cause inner conflict. The Shadow of a Sin embodies Brame's remarkable ability to create three-dimensional, deeply human characters for whom romance and remorse
...In nineteenth-century England, marriages were often carefully arranged affairs that sought to achieve multiple social, cultural and financial objectives. When the daughter of one aristocratic clan opts to marry for love, rather than for political reasons, alienating her family in the process, the decision sets off a series of tragedies and negative consequences. Can the power of true love set everything aright?
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