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Not for the Faint of Heart

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From New York Times bestselling author Lex Croucher comes a queer historical YA romance, with all the swoons, laughs, and heart-pounding moments you'd expect from a story about the granddaughter of Robin Hood and the girl she's accidentally kidnapped.
'You aren't merry,' Clem said to her captor. 'And you aren't all men. So there's been some marketing confusion somewhere along the line.'
Mariel, a newly blooded and perpetually grumpy captain of the Merry Men, is desperate to live up to the legacy of her grandfather, the legendary Robin Hood. Clem, a too-perky backwoods healer known for her new-fangled cures, just wants to help people.
When Mariel's ramshackle band of bandits kidnap Clem as retribution for her guardian helping the Sheriff of Nottingham, all seems to be going (sort of) to plan ... until Jack Hartley, Mariel's father and Commander of the Merry Men, is captured in a deadly ambush. Determined to prove herself, Mariel sets out to get him back – with her annoyingly cheerful kidnappee in tow.
But the wood is at war. Many believe the Merry Men are no longer on the right side of history. Watching Clem tend the party's wounds and crack relentlessly terrible jokes, Mariel begins to doubt the noble cause to which she has devoted her life. As the two of them grow closer, forced by circumstances to share a single horse and bed, one thing is clear. They must prepare to fight for their lives and for those of everyone they've sworn to protect.
Lex Croucher's Not for the Faint of Heart is a thrilling adventure full of hijinks, found family, and romance destined to change the lives of the inhabitants of the Greenwood Forest forever.

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    • Kirkus

      August 15, 2024
      The once-celebrated Merry Men have lost their way in the years since Robin Hood left the cause, making them nearly as feared as the Sheriff of Nottingham. Serious, unflappable Mariel Hartley-Hood has a lot to live up to as Captain of the Merry Men. Her father is Commander Hartley, and she's the granddaughter of Robin Hood himself. Her ragtag team is on the right track until a botched kidnapping lands her with a very annoying (and distractingly cute) captive: Clemence Causey. Clem is a wisecracking, skilled natural healer from a far corner of the forest. Eventually, Clem's humor and lightheartedness chip away at Muriel's stoic exterior, and sharp banter and tender moments stoke a romantic fire between the two. When Mariel learns that her father has been captured by the Sheriff, the Merry Men (and Clem) embark on a rescue mission. Told from Clem's and Mariel's alternating third-person perspectives, this queer enemies-to-lovers romp features a cast of racially diverse Merry Men who, of course, are not all men--the gang members use a variety of pronouns and represent a range of sexualities. Clem and Mariel read white. Croucher peppers their well-paced, witty, and thrilling novel with battle scenes. The story takes as many twists as the winding forest paths and hums with an undercurrent of friendship, honor, and the importance of found family. A captivating, action-packed, queer reimagining of the Robin Hood legend through the sharp eyes of his granddaughter.(Fiction. 14-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2024
      Grades 9-12 There was always something queer about Robin Hood and his Merry Men. Croucher (Gwen and Art Are Not in Love, 2023) goes whole hog on that thought, setting this kidnapping romance two generations later with Robin's uptight granddaughter, Mariel, who captains her own rainbow crew of every hue. Nowadays, though, these men are more militant than merry, thanks to Mariel's ambitious father/commander. When he's captured during an ambush, she'll do whatever it takes to rescue him and win his respect. The other half of the central grumpy/sunshine pairing is Clem, a healer consensually abducted by Mariel's squad to aid its cause. This extremely lighthearted adventure leans, in Clem's chapters, on the healer's relentlessly sunny, quippy disposition to keep the vibes bright. There's a self-awareness to the dialogue and world building that gives Croucher free rein to play, filling pages with modern concepts and steering around contemporary expectations of a Robin Hood adventure. Though more com than rom and more ren-faire than hist-fic, it's genuinely funny and still, somehow, works as well as any late-aughts BBC series.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 23, 2024
      Croucher (Gwen and Art are Not in Love) presents a queer reimagining of the Robin Hood legend through the eyes of his granddaughter. As the daughter of the leader of the Merry Men, Mariel Hartley-Hood has a lot to prove when her father takes over following her grandfather Robin Hood’s retirement. After a hostage situation goes sideways and her father is captured, Mariel gears up for a daring
      rescue—provided that her increasingly complicated feelings for her cheery, chatty hostage Clemence “Clem” Causey don’t get in the way. Anachronistic humor (Clem calls herself a “five-star abduction” and jokingly refers to her kidnappers as an “all-star line-up”) and the modern cadence of the dialogue prevent this hijinks-filled historical romance from feeling fully rooted in the medieval setting. Depictions of Robin Hood’s anarchist mutual aid
      collective of Merry Men juxtaposed with Mariel’s father’s leadership adds teeth to this lighthearted rom-com adventure, which features explosively described fight sequences and a wealth of fun and campy tropes, including a slow-burning enemies-to-lovers romance. Mariel and Clem are white and queer; supporting characters are intersectionally diverse. Ages 13–up. Agent: Chloe Seager, Madeleine Milburn Literary.

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