The American Heir


Book Description

THE AMERICAN HEIR is book 4 of the Billionaire Duke series. This series needs to be read in order. If you haven’t read the other books, now’s a good time to go back and see what you missed. Start with THE BILLIONAIRE DUKE. Does their marriage stand a ghost of a chance? Seattle billionaire and reluctant new duke Riggins Feldhem is going to be a father, whether he likes it or not. And he's deeply in love with his duchess. How much is he willing to sacrifice to make his temporary marriage permanent and find his happily-ever-after? The Duchess of Witham is ready to fight to keep her duke. But old ghosts have a way of haunting the present and one of them is gunning for her future with Riggins. Scroll up and grab your copy today!




The American Catalogue


Book Description

American national trade bibliography.










The Unknown Heir


Book Description

A woman must make a match for an eligible American bachelor while trying to resist his charms in this captivating Regency romance. Miss Hester Sheldon believes the American heir to her adopted grandfather’s estate is a rogue and a rebel—with no fortune of his own. Now she has been instructed to teach him the ways of English society, and to find him a suitable wife! But Jared Clinton turns out to be powerful, very wealthy—and extremely handsome! Hester, who has always thought she was destined never to marry, is shocked by her building desire. Soon she is wishing that she could be his chosen bride . . .







The American Decisions


Book Description







The American Heir


Book Description

Secrets come in all sizes, forms, and severities. Some secrets are simply a nuisance, like an old boyfriend or girlfriend you are trying to forget. Some are embarrassing, like a mouse running through your kitchen on Thanksgiving Day in front of the whole family. Others are like a hand grenade in your toilet; eventually they just blow the lid off! What would you do if you found out you inherited a castle in England? What if you were promised a million dollars to visit, if only for a week? Is it worth leaving the comfortable life you have now? Is it worth your very life itself? Mika Cosgrove is an American school teacher, but also the heir of Moinster castle in northern England. Mika is caught in a life-changing adventure through a foreign land, thrust into the role of proprietor and perpetuator of his family name and grandest possession. His youthfulness and pride are at once his greatest virtue, as well as his costliest vice. His only salvation may lie with a local newspaper reporter with whom he has fallen in love. Have his actions really resulted in destroying his family legacy? Can he manage to preserve the dignity of his family name, as well as his own life? Moinster doesn't pay taxes and isn't under the authority of the Queen. A four hundred and fifty year old secret lies at the heart of the ninety-two hundred acre estate, a secret that draws in the Royal Crown of England and the president of Germany. Who really owns Moinster, and what will it cost them to keep it?




The Heir Apparent Presidency


Book Description

It was during the Depression, with the Republican regime in disarray, that Franklin D. Roosevelt came into office with a mandate to change the role of government. His was one of the presidencies—like Jefferson's, Jackson's, and Lincoln's before his, and Reagan's after—that transformed the political system. But what of the successors of such transformative figures, those members and supporters of the new regime who are expected to carry forward the policies and politics of those they replace? It is these "heir apparent" presidents, impossibly tasked with backward-looking progress, that Donald Zinman considers in this incisive look at the curious trajectories of political power. An heir apparent president, in Zinman's analysis, can be successful but will struggle to get credit for his achievements. He must contend with the consequences of his predecessor's policies while facing a stronger opposition and sitting atop an increasingly weakened and divided party. And he will invariably alternate between three approaches to leadership: continuity, expansion, and correction. Looking in depth at James Madison, Martin Van Buren, Ulysses S. Grant (an heir apparent as the first genuine Republican to succeed Lincoln), Harry S. Truman, and George H. W. Bush, Zinman reveals how these successors of regime-changing presidents at times suffered for diverging from their predecessors' perceived policies. At times these presidents also suffered from the consequences of the policies themselves or simply from changing political circumstances. What they rarely did, as becomes painfully clear, is succeed at substantially changing the policies and politics that they inherited. It is a perilous and often thankless business, as The Heir Apparent Presidency makes abundantly clear, to follow and lead at once. Tracing the ways in which heir apparent presidents have met this challenge, this book offers rare and valuable insight into the movement of political time, and the shaping of political order.