The Sicilian's Stolen Son Audiobook By Lynne Graham cover art

The Sicilian's Stolen Son

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The Sicilian's Stolen Son

By: Lynne Graham
Narrated by: Ione Butler
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In this secret baby romance from USA TODAY bestselling author Lynne Graham, this scandalous Sicilian will claim his son…with a very convenient ring!

At the Sicilian’s bidding...and bedding!

The only link Jemima Barber has to her troubled late twin sister is her nephew. So when the boy’s father storms into their lives, to reclaim the child who was stolen from him, Jemima lets the forbidding Sicilian believe she is her smooth seductress of a sister…

Though his son’s mother might be gentler than Luciano Vitale remembers, he’s resolved to make her pay in the most pleasurable way imaginable. But when he discovers she’s a virgin — her secret is out! Now Luciano has a new proposal: Jemima can atone for her sister’s sins...by becoming his wife!

From Harlequin Presents: Escape to exotic locations where passion knows no bounds.
Contemporary Women's Fiction
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Review: The Sicilian’s Stolen Son by Lynne Graham – 4/5 Stars

The Sicilian’s Stolen Son offers a gripping plot with a Sicilian mafia backdrop and a tortured H2 who steals the show with his depth and distrust. He has his reasons, as we learn, making him a compelling lead. The epilogue’s HEA glow and light mafia vibe—without heavy violence—were nice touches, boosting it to a 4/5. However, sympathizing with H1 is tough due to the custody mess—she starts as a lying liar who lies, assuming ownership of a child not hers, leaving a bad taste that lingers despite later revelations softening her flaws. The slim focus on her motherly nature and protective intent early on made her too similar to the villainous sister, undermining empathy until too late. The convoluted plot and rushed pacing (e.g., late family drama) feel like a puzzle, not a smooth escape, hard to enjoy during saucy scenes with that niggling doubt. Revealing her character gradually was clever, but more upfront innocence was needed. Good, not great—4/5 fits.

Review: The Sicilian’s Stolen Son by Lynne Graham

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