
However, no amount of money, or nice houses, or fast cars, were ever enough for his wife, and when she couldn’t get pregnant, the couple turned to IVF. Now, impoverished and pregnant with a child that she doesn’t want, she contacts Dominic, hoping that this other couple will want and love the child that she is now carrying.ĭominic has battled his way up from the slums to become a billionaire businessman. When she refused to accept the “fix” that the IVF clinic offered, her husband decided this was the last straw and left her, finally moving in with the mistress that Angie never even realized existed. Shortly after conceiving, however, she discovered that there was a mixup in the lab, and the embryo that had been implanted actually belonged to another couple.

After realizing that she couldn’t conceive naturally, she underwent an IVF procedure, which again made her husband emphasize how “real” women wouldn’t need to resort to such measures. This was such a great story! Angie never actually wanted children, but her husband insisted that she wasn’t a “real” woman because of it. For the full review, please visit The Romanceaholic.Īfter having read The Accidental Birthright by another author, Maisey Yates, and enjoying it thoroughly, I decided that I needed to see if there were any other HP’s that contain IVF mixups, and stumbled across this one. Trish reckons she has the best job in the world. When she’s not out traveling the world in search of inspiration for her stories, Trish lives with her husband, Daisy their over enthusiastic Cavoodle pup, Daisy, and Leo, their very old and totally unenthusiastic cat, down on the glorious South Coast of South Australia where the waves crash over the granite rocks and splash upon the golden sands. Trish still loves writing romance but these days combines it with all the fun, drama and sisterhood of women, family and girlfriends. Some forty books later, Trish is now an award winning and USA Today Bestselling Author of some 40+ books. it was a further eleven years (and two more babies:)) before Trish sold her first book to Harlequin Presents, and her dream of being a published author came true.

It was another twelve years, an accounting career and two babies on that Trish once again turned her mind to writing. (Enough to put you off "real jobs" for life).


Which Trish figures must be why she spent her university years washing dishes in a Chinese restaurant by night and picking gherkins for an Adelaide Hills primary producer by day. Trish Morey always fancied herself a writer, but was sternly advised that she better better think about getting a real job instead.
