When you need help, better not look a gift horse in the mouth…
Synopsis
A missed path. A lost love. And a second chance to get it right.
James Charlton may be second-in-command at his father’s lucrative business, but, according to his parents, he’s just not ‘posh’ enough for the kind of woman they expect him to marry. When they decide he would be perfect for the horse-mad daughter of a local earl, James needs to up his game. First step, learn to ride… But James has never even sat on a horse before.
Dagmar Ingenfeld’s life revolves around horses. She barely has room to breathe, running the stables on a country estate while desperately trying to help her mother save her café from foreclosure. When a rich and handsome man from her past arrives back in her life, she wants him straight back out again. James Charlton is nothing but bad news. Until he offers her a chance to save the café.
Only one catch. Dagmar must teach him how to ride – and fast.
As the lessons begin, Dagmar sees a different side to James, and an old flame is rekindled. But how can their budding romance go anywhere when she’s a stable girl, and he’s expected to ride into the sunset with the earl’s daughter?
James must decide whether to follow the money or take a chance on Dagmar, and perhaps, against all odds, discover the true path to happiness.
My review
Dagmar Ingenfeld’s world is surrounded by horses. She loves riding horses, wins even local prizes with them, and spends every minute by running the stables of the local country estate. To say that she is more a horse – person than a people – person would be an understatement. But even if horses are her world, when Dagmar learns that her mother’s café is at risk of closure, she wants to do whatever she can to help her mother out. Even if that means helping James Charlton… James himself is tired of his parents’ matchmaking schemes. And their latest perfect match is the daughter of an Earl, who adores horses. So if James want to take over his father’s business, he must show them that he is ‘posh’ enough. But to be what his parents want him to be, and to get the attention of Lady Victoria, he needs to get back in the saddle, literally. Or rather, get on the saddle for a first time. And who has the best reputation for riding lessons? But Dagmar is totally not interested in helping James out, as he is not a stranger. But with her helping him, he would be able to help her… So is there really a choice?
What I love about this marvellous series, is that it gives chances that we got to know in previous instalments, yet giving new readers still a chance to enjoy the book, as it can be read as a standalone.
And it’s also lovely to get to know these characters so much better, and how sometimes our first impressions of them can be wrong.
There is something I have to admit about Dagmar before I start talking all the reasons that I *do* like her. Because I know a Dagmar myself, and I don’t get along with that Dagmar, I found it a bit difficult to switch of my person thoughts and give this character a real chance. Luckily, it was easy to forget about ‘my’ Dagmar, as Dagmar Ingenfeld is just a lovely person.
And even if I am not a horse – person myself (I am the kind of person that petrifies when a horse gets too close 😊), I could understand why Dagmar loves those creatures so much. It was sweet to see how much she cares about them, how much she understands them and even how they understand her.
Beside the horses, there are many things about Dagmar that I recognized. I could easily see her characteristics also in mine. And the fact that she doesn’t have many human friends, is even wary of them, made me feel so much sympathy for her. And then reading about the difficult times she also had as a child, made me feel for her even more.
But I didn’t just sympathize with or feel for Dagmar, I truly liked her as a persona. Even if she is rather on her own, for those she cares about and those she loves, she would do anything. And for her mother, nothing is too much.
Not even helping out the man that she used to have a crush on when being younger. The man that caused her a heartbreak on several levels. Yet he may just be the man that can help her and her mother. So obviously, she cannot refuse to learn him to ride, right?
I have to admit, that right from the start, James’s tale made me feel angry. Not that James himself is a bad person, but the fact that he is forced in a direction by his own parents, angered me. On one hand, I could understand the allure of being linked with an important family. But is that allure the right thought to have for your child? Shouldn’t you be ‘pushing’ your child to make a match out of love rather out of money?
And I felt sad that James didn’t get heard by his parents, no matter how hard he tries. And it saddened me to read how rather our of despair, James agrees to the plans of his parents.
Of course, as a reader, I was eager to see how these two characters would get along in the story. Because of their background, it didn’t come as a surprise that Dagmar isn’t all that thrilled by spending time with James again. And yet we see that each story has two sides, as James remembers Dagmar in a different light than how Dagmar remembers him.
I loved reading how initially their work agreement has to stay a secret, yet slowly their relationship changes. From just understanding the made agreement, to spend more time together, to become friends and to even defend each other, it was great to read their development.
This story was a real delight to read. The feelings are changing slowly, as both main characters are getting to know each better, and for real this time. Of course there are some bumps in the roads, and a few misunderstandings. Not only between Dagmar and James, but also misunderstanding themselves.
The fact that slowly both Dagmar and James are growing, evolving and opening up, even fighting back, was just making me cheer for them as an individual but also as a pair even more. Because with them, we see that the older we get, the wiser we get. Everyone has childhood sins, mistakes they made. But with growing up, we also change. And changing means forgiving for the past mistakes, and allow new feelings to grow.
Margaret Amatt managed to write a marvellous new chapter in an amazing series. With seeing old friends again, making new friends, I don’t think I will ever get bored by returning to Glenbriar!






























