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Reviews for The Hamilton Heir

 The Hamilton Heir magazine reviews

The average rating for The Hamilton Heir based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2020-10-19 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 2 stars Tabatha Loftis
The book started off good but I felt Dawn's personality was inconsistent. I feel it was because the author was trying to rush through the book at a certain point. Wasn't a horrible read but it isn't something I could recommend.
Review # 2 was written on 2014-06-21 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Ben Ushler
Continuing in the series, it appears most of the Hamilton children have problems. A lot has happened before this story begins. Oldest son Jeremy, has left the company in the hands of second son Tim because he's learned his father isn't Tim's and he's gone to find his real grandparents. Youngest daughter Melissa has run off with her boyfriend to who-knows-where. Patriarch of the clan, Wallace, is in the hospital recuperating from an illness. Only the twins and sister Amy seem to be on a even keel. That leaves Tim in charge of Hamilton Media and he's bound and determined to live up to the reputation his older half-brother has left behind and keep the company going. when he damages his secretary's car while talking on his cell and driving, Tim doesn't know it but he's on his way to a monumental change in his life. Granted Tim seems to suffer from a surfeit of money syndrome. Going to a store to buy his secretary a hairbrush, he buys every one in stock so she can select the one she wants. Inviting her to a party, he proceeds to buy her a dress plus every accessory imaginable to go with it so she won't feel out of place. This occurs over and over again and he seems to have no idea this isn't the way to act. Through Dawn Leroux, Tim learns everyone considers him a workaholic, that "Money is no object" isn't the right attitude to have, and that there's more to life than keeping a company from going under...that faith and family are important, too. Though it seemed at times Tim took for granted everything and believed everyone thought the same way he did, it doesn't take much to make him change his mind on that score...or to fall in love with Dawn who's his exactly opposite inbackground. It's a lovely story but one should read the whole series in order to know exactly what all the references are about. Book #r in the David Landing series This novel as a gift to the reviewer and no remuneration was involved in the writing of this review.


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