Magnate

Book Cover
Average Rating
Series
Publisher
Zebra Books
Publication Date
2016
Language
English

Description

For fans of HBO’s The Gilded Age, explore the dazzling world of America’s 19th century elite in this lush series of sparkling, page-turning love stories…New York City's Gilded Age shimmers with unimaginable wealth and glittering power. The men of the Knickerbocker Club know this more than anyone else. But for one titan of industry, the business of love is not what he expected…Born in the slums of Five Points, Emmett Cavanaugh climbed his way to the top of a booming steel empire and now holds court in an opulent Fifth Avenue mansion. His rise in stations, however, has done little to elevate his taste in women. He loathes the city's "high society" types, but a rebellious and beautiful blue-blood just might change all that…Elizabeth Sloane's mind is filled with more than the latest parlor room gossip. Lizzie can play the Stock Exchange as deftly as New York's most accomplished brokers—but she needs a man to put her skills to use. Emmett reluctantly agrees when the stunning socialite asks him to back her trades and split the profits. But love and business make strange bedfellows, and as their fragile partnership begins to crack, they'll discover a passion more frenzied than the trading room floor… Raves for The Courtesan Duchess"Original and alluring." —Publishers Weekly"Riveting." —Sabrina Jeffries"Passionate and seductive." —RT Book Reviews"Captivating." —Booklist

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Also in this Series

  • Magnate (The Knickerbocker Club Volume 1) Cover
  • Baron (The Knickerbocker Club Volume 2) Cover
  • Mogul (The Knickerbocker Club Volume 3) Cover

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Author Notes

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NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Set in Gilded Age Manhattan, these steamy historical romances introduce independent heroines whose career ambitions set them on collision courses with wealthy and powerful men. Both series feature vividly rendered settings and characters who rebel against the era's social norms. -- NoveList Contributor
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Published Reviews

Publisher's Weekly Review

This original and captivating historical romance splendidly portrays two protagonists with complex and layered personalities. Steel magnate Emmett Cavanaugh is one of the most powerful and feared men in business, but by the standards of the glittering Gilded Age, he's nouveau riche and can't hope to be welcomed into the circles of New York City's powerful Knickerbocker families. Former debutante Elizabeth Sloane knows that having dinner with Emmett is scandalous enough to ruin her reputation, but she bucks tradition to use her brains and change her life. Lizzie chafes at the strict rules that say she is just ornamental, and she talks Emmett into backing her own investment brokerage firm. Emmett learned to be ruthless when he was growing up in the slums, but the all-consuming passion and gentle tenderness he feels for Lizzie terrifies him. He's entranced by Lizzie's beauty, ambition, and determination, but is convinced she would never stay with him, while Lizzie tries to protect herself from getting hurt. The ensuing battle of wills is engrossing as Emmett and Lizzie work through past hurts, pride, and mistrust to have a future together. The poor boy turned millionaire marrying the princess is typical romance fare, but Lizzie and Emmett's marvelous portrayals add fresh life to a familiar story. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Library Journal Review

Elizabeth Sloane, a golden girl of Gilded Age New York with a monied pedigree, also has a shrewd business sense and wants to start her own investment firm. In search of a backer, Elizabeth approaches Emmett Cavanaugh, a self-made steel magnate who doesn't care a whit about society's expectations. He's happy to back Elizabeth, even if he finds her charms distracting. VERDICT Gilded Age romances have all of the opulence of the ever-popular Regency-era romances without that been-there-done-that feeling. Shupe's characters are captivating and unorthodox, the descriptions of society life are extravagant, and the love scenes are steamy. (LJ 4/15/16) © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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Kirkus Book Review

A wager between a Knickerbocker princess and an upstart steel magnate from the slums leads to marriage in this novel set in New York City during the Gilded Age. Shupe (Tycoon, 2016, etc.) returns with the first full-length novel in her Knickerbockers Club series about a group of wealthy industrialists. Lizzie Sloane feels stifled by the constraints placed on young, unmarried women. Bored by the parties and opera outings considered by her brother and guardian to be appropriate activities for her, Lizzie intends to make a fortune speculating on the stock exchange instead. She approaches Emmett Cavanaugh, hoping to convince the wealthy owner of East Coast Steel to provide the necessary backing for her investment firm. Emmett is a ruthless businessman who overcame crushing childhood poverty. Unwillingly attracted to Lizzie and unable to resist the chance to gain a business advantage over her brother, Emmett suggests a wager that could cost Lizzie her shares in her family's rail company. Lizzie accepts. But the pair's association quickly leads to scandal, and Emmett finds himself blackmailed into marriage by Lizzie's brother. The rest of the book continues at the same quick and enjoyable pace even as Shupe deftly weaves other characters from the series into the narrative. A slower pace might have served the main story better in some places, however. Emmett spends most of the novel tormented by his failure to protect his family and by the things he did to overcome poverty. Until suddenly he isn't. A more in-depth exploration of Emmett's change of heart would have been preferable. Readers will enjoy this entertaining romance about two people who refuse to let society dictate whom they love. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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Library Journal Reviews

Frustrated by her brother's dismissive attitude toward her plans to open a stock brokerage firm, socialite and sub rosa investor Elizabeth Sloane goes to the one man powerful and wealthy enough to help her—steel magnate Emmett Cavanaugh. But Emmett rose from the squalor of Five Points and has little regard for members of the privileged upper classes, even lovely, smart ones such as Elizabeth—until she makes him a wager he can't refuse and their lives take a startling turn. A cast of well-defined supporting characters (Emmett's young siblings are most memorable and an underhanded villain is wonderfully despicable), an inconvenient—or make that convenient—historic snowstorm, and a thread of mystery keep the pages turning. VERDICT A determined heroine ahead of her time and a daring, sometimes ruthless entrepreneur who clawed his way to the top find validation in an engaging romance that successfully launches a trilogy highlighting New York's opulent Gilded Age. Quotes from American Etiquette and Rules of Politeness (1883) introduce each chapter and provide perspective on the social attitudes of the times. Shupe (The Lady Hellion) lives in South Orange, NJ.

[Page 76]. (c) Copyright 2016 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Copyright 2016 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Library Journal Reviews

Elizabeth Sloane, a golden girl of Gilded Age New York with a monied pedigree, also has a shrewd business sense and wants to start her own investment firm. In search of a backer, Elizabeth approaches Emmett Cavanaugh, a self-made steel magnate who doesn't care a whit about society's expectations. He's happy to back Elizabeth, even if he finds her charms distracting. VERDICT Gilded Age romances have all of the opulence of the ever-popular Regency-era romances without that been-there-done-that feeling. Shupe's characters are captivating and unorthodox, the descriptions of society life are extravagant, and the love scenes are steamy. (LJ 4/15/16)

[Page 73]. (c) Copyright 2016 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Copyright 2016 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

This original and captivating historical romance splendidly portrays two protagonists with complex and layered personalities. Steel magnate Emmett Cavanaugh is one of the most powerful and feared men in business, but by the standards of the glittering Gilded Age, he's nouveau riche and can't hope to be welcomed into the circles of New York City's powerful Knickerbocker families. Former debutante Elizabeth Sloane knows that having dinner with Emmett is scandalous enough to ruin her reputation, but she bucks tradition to use her brains and change her life. Lizzie chafes at the strict rules that say she is just ornamental, and she talks Emmett into backing her own investment brokerage firm. Emmett learned to be ruthless when he was growing up in the slums, but the all-consuming passion and gentle tenderness he feels for Lizzie terrifies him. He's entranced by Lizzie's beauty, ambition, and determination, but is convinced she would never stay with him, while Lizzie tries to protect herself from getting hurt. The ensuing battle of wills is engrossing as Emmett and Lizzie work through past hurts, pride, and mistrust to have a future together. The poor boy turned millionaire marrying the princess is typical romance fare, but Lizzie and Emmett's marvelous portrayals add fresh life to a familiar story. (May)

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