

(in fact, I read a couple of others at the same time as this one), and some of the scenes in the siege in India feel perfunctory. Not quite a husband by Thomas, Sherry (Sherry M.) Publication date 2009 Topics Women physicians - Fiction, Man-woman relationships - Fiction Publisher New York : Bantam Books Collection inlibrary printdisabled internetarchivebooks Digitizing sponsor The Arcadia Fund Contributor Internet Archive Language English viii, 341, 2 p. Why would a man like Leo fall so hard for her? It isn't an un-put-down-able book The author has a good way with words, and I liked the strength of her heroine Bryony but was unconvinced by the love story. Bryony doesn't trust Leo and can't forgive him, but as they travel together through India and into danger, she has to re-evaluate what she believed happened in their marriage. Now, several years later, her father is ill, and Leo has been asked to fetch her back to see him. When she discovered him being unfaithful just before the wedding, it soured their new life and she left him. However, it's also a dissatisfying story, in part because the motivations of the hero, Leo,īryony Asquith married Leo Marsden, a man she had loved for many years. The story has many good points, including an unusual heroineĭoctor - and a setting in India. I very much enjoyed Sherry Thomas's previous books Private Arrangements and Delicious but found myself a little disappointed with Not Quite a Husband. Book review: Sherry Thomas's *Not Quite a Husband*
