Showing posts with label Georgette Heyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Georgette Heyer. Show all posts

Thursday, October 14, 2021

The Unknown Ajax

by Georgette Heyer (read by Daniel Philpott) c. 1959
an annual re-read

The Unknown Ajax  By  cover art

Never assume

When Major Hugo Darracott's father married a "weaver' brat" he was disowned. Hugo was born and raised in Yorkshire, schooled at Harrow, joined the Army, fought in the Peninsula and later resigned his commission. When the heir apparent to the Darracott title (and estates) and his son both die suddenly, Hugo is next in line. Grandfather Darracott summons him home to meet the family, marry his cousin Anthea and start learning about the estate he will soon inherit. Son of a "weaver's brat," the family expected a loutish country bumpkin -- and that is exactly who sat down to dinner that first evening. His Yorkshire accent was so thick it could be cut with a knife.

The book floats along on a river of misconceptions about the Heyero, who uses the family's own snobbery to learn more about them than they learn of him. This doesn't bother me. Heyer has gone this route before and her humor shines through. Such as in the scene between to the two valets Crimplesham and Polyphant. But the best scene of all is the final act, in which she describes in detail, sometimes hilarious, how Hugo saves a member of the family after he is shot by troopers trying to catch a band of smugglers. I read this book always in anticipation of this scene.

With a simple plot and a lot of embroidery to fancy it up, The Unknown Ajax is as much about Heyer's Regency world as it is the romance of Hugo and Anthea.

Four stars because the book is so subtle and delightful. It's not about the getting there as quickly as you can but about enjoying the scenery along the way.

 

Sunday, October 3, 2021

The Toll Gate

 

by Georgette Heyer (read by Daniel Hill ) c. 1954
an annual re-read
 
 
 
The Toll-Gate  By  cover art
 
 

More mystery than romance

I like this one. I like the characters -- both the romantic leads and the entire cast of secondary characters. I like the setting -- a bit outside the normal "life among the titled gentry" as it is set at a wayside toll gate in the middle of nowhere. I like the dark, gloomy atmosphere; there is not a lot of sunlight, warmth, bright colors and happy people in this tale. I like that the romance takes a backseat to the mystery.  In other words, I like everything about this very entertaining read.

Not quite four stars.
 
P.S. Terrible cover for a story that is anything but light and bright.

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

They Found Him Dead

 

Georgette Heyer (read by Ulle Birve) c. 1937
an annual re-read
 
They Found Him Dead  By  cover art
 
 

Killed by the narrator

Oh my goodness! The narrator is absolutely putting me to sleep.  Not only is her pacing slow but she speaks in almost a monotone and noticeably pauses for breath every few words, whether it is an appropriate place to pause or not. Most disconcerting.  Moreover, she doesn't appear to get Heyer's sense of humor.

In spite of the narrator, I enjoyed the story. It is the only reason I didn't decide to quit and move on.

A bit more than three stars. Not her best, but not her worst.

Monday, September 27, 2021

These Old Shades

 

by Georgette Heyer (read by Cornelius Garrett ) c. 1926
an annual -re-read
 
 
 
These Old Shades by Georgette Heyer - FictionDB  These Old Shades  By  cover art  All of Heyer: These Old Shades | This Delightful Habit of Journaling
 
 

"I bought him body and soul."

The Masqueraders and These Old Shades have been my two most favorite Georgette Heyer titles since I first read them as a teenager. While the rest of my Georgette Heyer top-10 list is constantly changing its order, the top slot has always been shared by these two books. I stubbornly refuse to choose one over the other and I stubbornly refuse to allow any other GH title to take their place.

So why These Old Shades?  Call it a young girl's romantic fancy. Mr. Talk, Dark and Dangerous and all that rigamarole. These days I read and re-read the stories for the language, the characters and for the insight into the author's time period not just the romance.  Yes, I read fluff, but that doesn't mean I can't have standards.  Every time I read the book I find another gem -- a bit of description, a character name that makes me laugh -- or even worse, makes me think.

Revenge is a dish best served cold and Satanas ( our hero's nickname) dishes it up with ice cold accuracy. He has a grudge against the Comte de St. Vire  and when he "buys" young Leon Bonnard from his jealous and abusive older brother and his wife, he has found the tool of his revenge.  Young Leon becomes the hero's page and the plot to topple St. Vire is underway.

This is a very early Georgette Heyer; she was 24 when this, her sixth book, was published. It was her first "bestseller."  I think that with this book, Heyer has finally found her storytelling voice. She always has been a storyteller, but now she has technique. Her first book, The Black Moth, was stories the teenaged Heyer would tell her invalid brother to entertain him. But, It took a few years and a couple of stories to find her talent for character development, for caricature and to find her sense of humor. Her books are definitely the happily ever after kind and for many of her readers, their "go-to" when they just need to escape the everyday world.

This is four star Georgette Heyer.
 
 
Cover comments: Cover on the first copy I ever read. Audio edition cover. Paperback I currently own. 

Thursday, September 23, 2021

Sylvester, or the Wicked Uncle

 

by Georgette Heyer (read by Nicholas Rowe) c. 1957
an annual re-read
 
 
Sylvester  By  cover art
 

The Duke of Salford grows up

Sylvester, Duke of Salford, is a 30 year-old arrogant prig of the first stare. OMG is he self-important. He has decided it is time to get married. So he draws up a list of 5 names, of women he has never met and consults his mother as to which one he should marry. Fortunately, it is all up-hill from there. Miss Phoebe Marlow pulls the rug out from under him, teaches him a thing or two about life in the real world and they live happily ever after.

Sylvester also gives of one us one of my favorite secondary characters: Sir Nugent Fotherby, a very rich fop with very opulent taste --and very unlikeable. I group him with Sir Bonamy Ripple (False Colours), Robert Barham (Masqueraders) and Mr. Jonathan Chawleigh (A Civil Contract), older gentlemen, a bit rotund, outlandishly dressed, without financial worries, who give some comic relief to the story.

Four stars for a most entertaining and enjoyable romp. 
 
And, yes the cover is an abomination. For a book set in Regency England, the use of photography is an anachronism and entirely off-putting.

Monday, September 20, 2021

Sprig Muslin

 

by Georgette Heyer (read by Sian Phillips) c. 1956
an annual re-read
 
 
Sprig Muslin  By  cover art




Sprig muslin: a fine white cotton fabric embroidered or woven with a pattern
 
 
Sometimes it is interesting to me to delve into the titles that Heyer chooses for her books. Cotillion and Black Sheep are two of my favorite title choices but Sprig Muslin is another one that is fun to explore.  Sprig muslin was a popular fabric starting in the early 1800s and used mostly for daytime wear. It is not as luxurious as silk, satin or brocade and therefore more suitable to young un-married women.

The book centers around a schoolroom miss who has runway from home because her grandfather won't let her marry the man of her choice.  Sprig muslin was worn by young women, especially unmarried women, so as a title it very quickly indicates that this story centers around a young woman of marriageable age. But Amanda lived in her own little fantasy world where the truth was, shall we say, flexible. In other words, she embroidered her stories, to deflect the truth, to get her own way or just because she like the way it sounded.  Spring muslin is a light-hearted fabric and so is this story.

Almost four stars. 
 
PS The cover choice for this audio edition is terrible. This book does not take place in Bath or any other city or town.
 
Arthur Barbosa, artist on the first edition covers, is the winner time after time as far as I am concerned..
 
SprigMuslin.jpgBarbosa - The Man who Drew Flashman (Slipcase Edition) at The Book PalaceSylvester or The Wicked Uncle - Part 1 - jenniferkloester.com

Friday, September 17, 2021

The Reluctant Widow

 

by Georgette Heyer (read by Cornelius Garrett )
an annual re-read
 
 
The Reluctant Widow  By  cover art
 
 

"It's the outside of enough"

Oh, I do so enjoy this story. It is so much fun even though it is a romantic mystery.  Once again, it is the secondary characters that are the icing on the cake -- the hero's younger brother and his very obedient dog, the bad guys, the old nanny.

Poor Elinor Rochdale, orphaned without an inheritance or relatives to who she might turn, makes her living as governess, which was really a thankless job.  As she is heading to her new posting, there is a bit of a mix-up when she gets off the mail coach in a remote village late one afternoon and she ends up at the wrong house and then reluctantly into a death-bed marriage and widowhood all within a dozen or so hours.  The rest of the book deals with the mystery that the dearly-departed was involved in and the slow development of the relationship between Elinor and Lord Carlyon, the man responsible for pushing her into the death-bed marriage. 

Almost four stars.

Halloween Bingo: Romantic Mystery

Thursday, September 16, 2021

My annual re-read list

 

Why it exists. Who is on it and why.



Since I am on a re-read bender right now, it might be a good time to talk about why I re-read.

When I first joined Audible in the early 2000s, I got two credits per month -- 24 books a year plus anything I cared to buy with cash.  That's not a lot when your normal reading pace is a book or more a week and it's a very slow way to build a library.   Sales were few and far between in those days and buying books for cash was prohibitive even with the members discount. I was dependent on re-reads at that point. Good thing I wasn't reading at the rate I am today.

I tried to fill in with library loans. The libraries were just starting to offer digital books and it was slim pickins. Finding my kind of book from among what the library was offering  was frustrating, to say the least. I used library loans for a while but eventually I had found everything the Boston Public Library had of interest.  When I had enough in my Audible library to feed the reading beast, I quit using the library. I filled my days between new books with re-reads and hard copy. Over time I was listening more and eyeballing less and less. Today, my consumption of books is almost entirely aural; eyeballing these days is for pretty pictures and travel guides not dense text. 

The annual re-read came about slowly. The first two authors I started collecting where Georgette Heyer and Dick Francis.  I scarfed up almost everything Audible had to offer and then kept watching for additions to the catalog.  A few years ago, I decided to add Nevil Shute to the list.  Re-reads aren't limited to the annual list, there are still titles that I like to read every couple of years, just because I like the book very much

The self-imposed rules of the program are simple:
  • All my Francis, Heyer and Shute are always on my iPod.
  • Books are read in alphabetic order (I got tired of deciding which to read next)
  • It is okay to skip a book if it does fit the mood (there are a couple that I don't read yearly anymore)
  • It is not necessary to go back to a skipped book.
  • When I get to the end, I start again.
  • There are bonus points for finishing the cycle in less than a year.
  • Other re-reads  are permissible and encouraged -- why own all of these books if you aren't going to read them? -- but only Francis, Heyer and Shute are "annual re-reads"
In the past couple of years a few things have changed that will lessen my dependence on re-reads. Last September, Audible introduced its catalog of free books, which is full of freebies from authors I like to read (Ngaio Marsh, Dorthy L. Sayers and other Golden Age mystery writers). The Plus Catalog also gives me a chance to try new authors without having to waste a credit. Then this past year, my daughter made me join the BLP again, which 15 years on in the development of access to recorded books has a much, much bigger library of audiobooks and also access to other library consortiums in the state.  I am doing more "new book" reading these days than re-reading but the annual re-reads will always be there because they are my palate cleansers and my escapes into fantasy and imagination.



Whose on the list and why
 
Georgette Heyer has been a favorite since I was a teenager,  my go-to escape from real life for almost 60 years.  Lots of people think that she is the author of bodice-rippers when in fact she is the author of well-researched historical novels. Some of her tales or more historic than other such as her novels featuring  William the Conqueror  (The Conqueror) and  Lady Smith (The Spanish Bride) after whom the South African township of Ladysmith is named -- and thus the band Ladysmith Black Mambazo. Much to Heyer's dismay, her reading public was much more interested in her historical romances. Like most popular authors, she wrote to eat and pay the creditors and taxman, writing mostly historical romances set in the Regency period. Long after I have stopped reading romances, I continue to read and re-read Georgette Heyer -- because if nothing else, she can write a sentence and she has a sense of humor that most other historical romance writers seem to lack.

My father introduced me to the Dick Francis mysteries sometime in the 1970s and I have been reading him ever since.   There is a reason that Dick Francis is on my annual re-read list. Actually, there are multiple reasons. First and foremost is the writing. It is clear and concise, well-spoken. Many people think that the actual wordsmithing was done by his wife, Mary -- and that may be possible. I have always felt that whoever wielded the pen/typewriter had a good, strong basic education and learned to write clearly early in life.  Second, is that he/they tell a rip-roaring good tale. 

Nevil Shute is a later-comer to the annual re-read. I read a couple of his books in high school -- everybody was reading On the Beach -- and then did not return to him until just a few years ago when they became available on Audible. I did not want to re-read On the Beach but I remembered that he was good storyteller.  I ended up choosing  Trustee From the Toolroom, his last book. I loved it so much that I started picking up other titles. After a couple of years, I decided that I enjoyed the stories so much that Nevil Shute should also be added to the annual re-read. 

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Regency Buck

 

by Georgette Heyer (read by June Barrie ) c. 1935
annual re-read
 
 
Regency Buck  By  cover art



Regency Buck was Heyer's first  foray into the Regency period but with over a dozen books behind her, it was a smooth transition. 

With complete disregard for her guardian's wishes,  wealthy and still under-aged Miss Judith Taverner travels to London to take her place in society. When she finally meets her guardian in person, Lord Worth is not the sexagenarian friend of her late father  she had expected to be meet but his son.  Still, that doesn't stop Miss Taverner from taking the town by storm nor from ignoring most of the rules of proper behavior that a debutante is expected to follow. She drives her own  carriage and is anything but a shy, retiring young woman. She is intelligent and independent minded in a period of time when young women were anything but.  Meanwhile, Lord Worth is trying to protect her from those who are trying to marry her for her money, especially one young man who has more than marriage in mind, without telling her what he is doing and why. What is it about these strong silent types who think they know more than everyone else and don't have to share what is on their mind?

If I were to finally make an ordered list of my favorite  GH titles, RB would not fall into the Top-10.  It is not a bad story but Lord Worth just does not do it for me.  While it is obvious that he is quite taken by her, I can't understand a hero who would not be forthright  with his lady-love and tell her what is going on.  Of course, then there would be no story and no mystery to solve, so I am just back to square one: having to put up with an annoying  hero. C'est la vie.

So three and half stars for this one.

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

The Quiet Gentleman

 

by Georgette Heyer (read by Cornelius Garrett)
No longer available on Audible 
 
 
The Quiet Gentleman  By  cover art
 

Someone is trying to bump off the *Heyero

Gervase Frant, heir to Stanyon Castle and the family title, was pretty much disowned by his father, for no fault of his own. Now Pop has died and Gervase has returned from the war to assume his rightful place as head of the family, owner of Stanyon Castle and Earl of St. Erth.    But, someone is out to kill him and St. Erth has to figure out who and why. The book was written and published as a Regency Romance (a genre created by Heyer, who has been imitated but never equaled), so all of this intrigue is sprinkled among the budding romances and the merry dance of who will end up with whom.

Heyer is known for her secondary characters and in this tale , Gervase's valet/former batman  and his stepmother are the two stand-outs. I just love the valet's  Spanglish-- his blue collar, for want of a better word, English mixed with words and phrases picked up  on campaign in Spain (somewhat in the mode of the educated nobility and gentility littering  their speech with Gallicisms). Stepmother is the quintessential  Heyer dowager.

The Quiet Gentleman is one of a handful of Heyer Regencies that mixes romance and intrigue .

Not quite four star Heyer.

Definitely a contender for Halloween bingo:  Genre: Mystery, Cozy Mystery,  Murder Most Foul,Romantic Suspense

*  A fandom conflation of Heyer and hero.  There are also Heyeroines.

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

The Nonesuch

 

Georgette Heyer (read by Eve Matheson)
 
The Nonesuch  By  cover art
 
 

There is no one like him

This is one of those love stories that turns on a misunderstanding. The already rich and famous, though self-effacing Sir Waldo Hawkridge, The Nonesuch, has inherited a wreck of a mansion and has come to the country to inspect it. The love interest is the chaperone to a young termagant of an heiress. They meet, they get to know one another, he falls head over heels for the chaperone who slowly realizes she is in love with him. There is a misunderstanding just to spice things up and in the end they live happily ever after -- without the heiress, who is sent back to her guardian.

Folks, this is a four star Georgette Heyer -- delightful, enjoyable, fun to read, fun cast of characters thrown into all sorts of scrapes and folly.

Monday, May 24, 2021

The Masqueraders

 

By Georgette Heyer (read by Ruth Sillers)

The Masqueraders  By  cover art



A favorite comfort read for over 55 years
 
Set just after the Jacobite Rising of 1745, The Masqueraders is a rollicking romantic comedy along Shakespearean lines. After almost 30 years abroad, the banished black sheep of the family now heir to the family title returns home to claim it. He brings along his two children to witness his triumphant return. Well, actually, he sends them along ahead of his arrival, which is actually an issue because both father and son, were involved in the Rebellion -- on the wrong side --and there the story begins.

This has long been one of my favorite books. I don't care if the plot is unbelievable. The book is fun; you aren't supposed to take it seriously. Heyer's writing is a pleasure to read. She has a way with characters, especially the secondary characters, that can have you laughing out loud and she knows how to write a romance. Yes, there is a certain amount of formula to her writing and certain social prejudices that today we find unacceptable -- but if you are going to read books written in the middle of the 20th century, you are going to find that a lot of what was written then is unacceptable today -- so get over it. We can't change the past and we shouldn't erase it.


This is a four and a half star Heyer!

Sunday, May 23, 2021

No Wind of Blame

 By Georgette Heyer (read by Ulli Birve)

No Wind of Blame: Inspector Hemingway, Book 1  By  cover art



Killed by the narrator

The characters in this are priceless  -- Mrs. Carter and her daughter Vicky are the absolute definition of "drama queens" and Heyer has written them beautifully. She has a flair for this kind of comedic secondary character. 

However, the narrator is terrible. Among her other faults, she has a two beat pause between pause between every close quotation mark and "he said." It drove me up a wall plus her pronunciation of certain words is like she has never seen the words before.  I can't belief that the standard British pronunciation of inventory is inVENToree  -- just to name a few of her jarringly odd pronunciations. I don't want to say they are wrong because in years of listening to British narrators, I have learned that  there are pronunciation differences between American and British English.

Unfortunately, when the re-recorded the Heyer mysteries, Bolinda, the publisher used the same woman to record all of them.  After listening to two I refuse to buy anymore. The only thing good about the Bolinda editions of the mysteries are the covers.

Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Friday's Child

 

By Georgette Heyer (read by Eve Matheson)
 
 
Friday's Child  By  cover art
Terrible cover



Lord Sherringham comes of age.

While it would appear from the title that this story is about the heroine, the more I listen to it, the more I feel that it is more the hero's coming of age story. The title comes from the nameless nursery rhyme:

Monday's child is fair of face
Tuesday's child is full of grace
Wednesday's child is full of woe
Thursday's child has far to go,
Friday's child is loving and giving,
Saturday's child works hard for a living,
And the child that is born on the Sabbath day
Is bonny and blithe, and good and gay.

In a fit of pique, young Sherringham marries his childhood friend, Hero. She is a bit of a Cinderella -- orphaned, living with relatives, poorly treated. He married, first, because his inamorata rejected him and, second, to gain control of his fortune; she married because at age 17 she was going to be packed off to be a governess. Neither of the pair was ready for marriage but both in their immaturity agreed that it was the only solution. The rest of the story is their merry path to adulthood and happily ever after

Sadly, the narrator is a bit whiny and screechy and I seem to notice it more and more with every read. Still, I have seen what has been done with re-issues and for me it is a case of "better the devil you know."

Three and a half stars for the humor and the romance. Not her best Regency romance but far from her worst.

Sunday, March 14, 2021

Frederica

 
By Georgette Heyer (read by Clifford Norgate)

Frederica  By  cover art

The jaded and bored Marquess finds his she-marquess.

While the title of the book is Frederica, this story is more about the hero, the Marquess of Alverstoke, who at the age of 37 had given up on love and marriage. He was a prize in the marriage sweepstakes -- money and a title -- but had no interesting in marrying anyone who was only after either of them. He could spot them a mile away. Then, he met Frederica, who was looking for neither. In fact, she had only sought out her distant cousin so that his wife could help her and her sister, Charys, navigate the London social season; imagine her surprise when Alverstoke said he wasn't married. And that was the meet-cute.

The story takes off when Alverstoke sees what a beauty Charys is and decides to use it to get a bit of revenge on his widowed sister who has asked him to give (and pay for) a ball in his niece's honor to launch her into society. Add a few more secondary characters into the story -- some school boy siblings, the heir to the Alverstoke title, some unwanted suitors --and you have a classic Georgette Heyer Regency romance. And they all live happily ever after.

Written barely 10 years before her death and in the fifth decade of her career, Heyer has long since hit her stride as an author. She has long since set the parameters of the genre that she is credited with inventing, the regency romance, and now she is knocking it out of that park time after time.

This is one of her best. Four and a half stars.

Sunday, February 28, 2021

The Foundling

 

Georgette Heyer (read by Phyllida Nash)
 
The Foundling  By  cover art

The Foundling is the adventures of the orphaned at birth, young Duke of Sales, who manages to escape the loving and well-intentioned bonds of his family and retinue in order to prove to himself and his family that he has reached maturity and is quite capable of taking care of himself and his dukedom. It is absurd and most entertaining, in a word, a farce. Pure escapism. Nobody does this kind of historical fiction with the same eclat, the same sense of humor and same writing talent as Georgette Heyer. 
 
Four stars and a bit, because it is laugh out loud funny.
 

Thursday, January 21, 2021

Quote of the Day

 Shared on Facebook, source unknown. A Civil Contract is one of my favorites and this one line from the book, sums up what it is all about.