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In Carla Kelly's works the men and women treat each other with respect. Admiration comes first, love follows. And the protagonists actually like each other before they consumate their relationship. Imagine that! In her books there is none of that "I hate him and yet I'm kissing him! Darn his maddening attraction!" There is only the believable progression from liking and admiration to love.
Roxanna Drew is an impoverished widow who loved her first husband (also something that virtually only Kelly would attempt) and has two adorable daughters. When we first meet her she is trying to avoid the ugly advances of her brother-in-law. Lord Winn is a military hero who doesn't fit in society anymore because of a disgraceful divorce. He becomes her landlord and falls in love with her and her family. As her situation becomes more desperate he offers to help. There are lots of very kind, believable moments as he gets to know Roxie and her daughters. Instead of the usual conflict consisting of contrived misunderstandings and forced bickering which hides "attraction," what threatens Roxie and Winn is her recent bereavement and reluctance to love again. As usual, it's the kind of actual human problem that only Carla Kelly would attempt in this genre. After I read Mrs. Drew I read all her other regencies and now she has effectively ruined me for every other romance writer. Darn her terrific writing ability!
The story contains a number of unexpected twists, but the underlying theme is of two people betrayed by love, who find it difficult to trust, and yet learn that they need to trust each other. Kelly pulls no punches, and at times the book is earthy, shocking and tear-inducing.
I loved it, and will be re-reading it very soon.
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There are some errors here with respect to titles (even the Divine Kelly gets it wrong!) and some sloppy editorial errors. However, this story is wonderful, as summed up elsewhere, and moves along at a cracking pace with a wonderful climax where Marian finally takes the lead in her relationship with Collinwood.
The secondary characters are, as always with Kelly, delightful and all of them add pertinence to the narrative.
Excellent; I truly enjoyed reading this one!
Marian, aged not quite seventeen and not out yet, is nevertheless the only 'sensible' person in her family household. It's a year after her father's death, which occurred just before Christmas the previous year, and this year she's determined to have a *happy* Christmas. After all, her family is practically bankrupt and they may have to move out of their home in the New Year.
Then her elder brother, Percy, arrives home for Christmas with two strange gentlemen in tow. One is intended as a suitor for Marian's sister Ariadne; he's wealthy, despite being obnoxious. The other is Lord Ingraham, an earl, badly scarred from a burn and clearly hiding from friends and family as a result.
Marian, with her penchant for healing sick and injured creatures, is immediately drawn to Ingraham and wants to help him; she provides him with a salve to lessen the pain of his burn, and in doing so sees the man whom she'd been warned by her brother was stiff and top-lofty actually *smile*.
Gil, as she comes to call him and think of him, joins in her amusement and seeks ways to rid the house of Ariadne's suitor. He defends her to Percy when her brother disapproves of her often unladylike behaviour. Marian is, of course, still strictly speaking, in the schoolroom, and - as other characters later remind her and Gil - is 'of the infantry'. Gil treats her sometimes as an equal, finding himself confiding in her, and sometimes as an amusing child; his most common nickname for her is 'brat'.
The story is told only from Marian's point of view, which is a fascinating device, because Gil's interest in her - not as a child, but as a woman he is falling in love with - is clearly apparent to the reader, but not to Marian. Charmingly naive as she is with regard to relationships, she misses his hints and doesn't understand his references to changing his mind about marriage and needing to speak to her brother. To the reader, Gil's intentions towards Marian are clear, and it's also clear that, in a scene we aren't privy to, he must have asked her brother's permission to court her.
It does take Marian some time - both aided and hampered by the goings-on of her family, and in particular the escapades of her younger brother Alastair - to understand what she feels for Gil, even though, right at the very start of their acquaintance, she ignored the Christmas wishes she'd intended to make for her family, and only wished instead that Gil should have the 'best Christmas ever'. By her efforts, she makes that come true for him...
...and in return, he makes all her wishes come true, and more.
A charmingly romantic book you won't forget in a hurry. One of Kelly's best, though - in the spirit of Christmas - without the heartwrenching angst of Mrs Drew Plays Her Hand or Reforming Lord Ragsdale, two of my other Kelly favourites.
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Kelly's descriptions of Oxford - the town and the university - suggests that she knows both places well; I've visited Oxford many times and am familiar with most of the colleges, and I found no anomalies in her depiction of the town.
I did particularly like her portrayal of Ellen's frustration at not being able to study and participate in learning, and at her brother's wasting of the opportunity he had. Ellen is so well written as a woman who desperately wants to learn and read and argue and develop her mind, and yet is forbidden by the mores and practices of her day. (Great use of St Hilda's, too, Kelly!). Ellen's debates with James on Shakespeare are very well written, and these encounters were a joy to read.
For a very different romance, even from most of Kelly's other novels, this one is well worth a look.
The story begins with a devastatingly funny portrayal of the Grimsley family. Think the Tallant family (in Arabella) crossed with the family of the heroine in the film The Breakfast Club. The family is country-based, of moderate means, and of a farming background - very minor gentry, in fact. Ellen Grimsley's elder sister Honoria is all set to marry the nitwitted son of a pompous baronet. Her elder brother Gordon is frittering his time away at Oxford; his family has decided he is to be a gentleman, and to that end, some terms at Oxford will be followed by a spell in the army. Gordon is barely scraping through his first year as required. His younger sister Ellen and his younger brother Ralph are the oddballs, or the odd ones in this rather dull family - both have a passion for learning, and especially for literature. Ralph is a Shakespeare fanatic, and his older sister cannot but absorb some of the Bard's lines. Her fate has all but been decided for her - she is to marry suitably, perhaps a young farmer with no interest in books. Poor Miss Grimsley!
It is fortunate then that her father's aunt has the bottles of fine wine that her father had recklessly promised the baronet (future father-in-law of his eldest daughter). To obtain these bottles for the wedding, the father must promise to send his daughter Ellen to a seminary in Oxford, run by the aunt's friends. So off Ellen goes with her aunt - and near the town, she meets an untidy but interesting scholar names James Gatewood.
The seminary proves to be a disappointment. Instead of studying geometry and Shakespeare (let alone geography) Ellen is expected to stitch samplers (which she does badly) and confine herself to a smattering of French. Most of Shakespeare is not allowed in the school library, some of his plays being considered indecent. [Did you know that MEASURE FOR MEASURE was an indecent play? Ah yes.]. Well, fortunately for Miss Ellen whose tongue gets her into trouble from the outset, she has a couple of friends, the maid Becky and Mr James Gatewood who falls into the habit of sending her chocolates (a slight anachronism) whenever Miss Ellen is being punished by being forced to write out lines and thus missing her meals.
In the meantime, brother Gordon gets into trouble in London town. He is already in trouble with the warden of his college, having missed one too many lectures. And now, he has no money to pay a student to write his essays for him! Oh dear. Well, fortunately sister Ellen is in Oxford, and is persuaded or cajoled into writing a brilliant essay on Shakespeare for him - which Gordon passes off as his own at a public reading of all the students' essays. Ellen has received help, not to mention a copy of the play, from James Gatewood. Gordon is duly applauded for his sudden brilliance, and persuades Ellen to write another essay and another. The great Shakespearean scholar Lord Chesney (a pun perhaps on the Regency author Marion Chesney?) even deigns to attend Gordon's lectures and obtains the only fair copies of the essays from him. All well and good, except that Ellen is seething with fury that a) she is not allowed the education that her brother takes for granted; b) she is stuck in this miserable seminary; and c) that her brother is taking her efforts for granted and taking the praise that he has not earned. She has some vague hopes that one day her efforts will be acknowledged, but now the dratted Lord Chesney has her only copies of her essays (she failed to make copies for herself, you see).
In the meantime, Ellen has been skirmishing with her roommate, Fanny Bland, shortly to be sister-in-law to her sister Honoria. Unfortunately, Ellen has also fallen into the trap of wanting to hear her essays read out in the august halls of Oxford, and dresses up in her brother's breeches and cloak to sneak into the college. And one day, she is caught on a tip-off from someone, perhaps Fanny - and she is publicly disgraced, and taken home by her father who informs her that she is being traded (in marriage) for a couple of fields to the young farmer who has admired her.
So what happens to Ellen, next? And who is James Gatewood, with such ready access to Lord Chesney's library and with the funds to pay for chocolates and coal alike? Is he really the descendant of a long line of horse-traders? Or, as we suspect (but Ellen does not), is he someone else? And what will happen to Ellen's scholarly ambitions?
I won't tell you the rest of the story, because it will spoil a delightful book. But I strongly encourage you to find it and read it to understand what kind of frustrated aspirations dwelt in the hearts and minds of many a bright young woman whose only options were frequently governessing (for a pittance) or marriage (perhaps to a man without any love of books). This is not so much a romance as an indiction of the withering of many intellects for centuries (although it is hardly radical feminism). And yes, there is a romance. If you are not aware by the middle that James Gatewood loves Ellen Grimsley... well, your standards of romance are very different from mine.
Rating = 4.8 (taking two points off for some slowness here and there)
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Onyx, our heroine, is - in the tradition of much of Kelly's writing - not of the best ton. In fact, she's illegitimate, though brought up in a good family. All her life, though, she's felt that she has to hide, and almost apologise for existing. Now, she has a proposal of marriage: a vicar, Andew Littlewood, has sought her hand. Grateful for the chance to escape her stepmother's tyranny, Onyx accepts.
En route to her fiance's home, however, her carriage is held up by a rough band of robbers who also threaten her virtue. Onyx is rescued by a shabbily-dressed soldier, who is shot and almost killed as a result. The soldier is Major Jack Beresford, returning from the Napoleonic Wars - and, it turns out, he knew Onyx's twin brother.
Onyx feels a definite bond with Jack, but what can she do? She's already engaged to another man, and anyway, once she discovers that Jack is the brother of a marquess, she knows that he's well out of her reach. She has to put him out of her mind, no matter how much he teases and flirts with her. And yet she knows that he needs her too, in several different ways - to help heal the wounds of war, both physical and mental.
This is a wonderful book, ranging from humorous to wistful to angsty to downright tearjerking. I couldn't help but like and feel sorry for Onyx, and who could help falling in love with Jack? And then there's Emily and Adrian, Jack's brother and his wife - also characters I loved getting to know.
A classic Carla Kelly, and well worth the collectors' price!
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When I heard that Ms. Kelly's next publication would be a book of short stories about the post-Civil War American West, I was disappointed because I rarely find that short stories satisfy my desire for deep involvement with characterization and plot. I should not have worried. I don't know how she does it, but Ms. Kelly can say more about a character, time and place in one paragraph than most writers can manage in a chapter.
These stories are beautiful, tragic, funny and elevating. They are built around life at U.S. Army forts, which were the vanguard of white civilization in the territories of the west. The "Ladies" of the title that we get to know here are heroic in the finest sense of the word. Their men, too, are worthy of them. Ms. Kelly debunks a lot of the myths surrounding the Old West. She clearly demonstrates her knowledge of the people and times, right down to the command structures of the army and the incessant bitter cold of the endless winters.
I cannot recommend this book highly enough! If you want to get lost in a time and place that will move you to laughter and tears; if you want to meet people who were able to forge lives out of dust, privation and beans; and, most especially, if you appreciate a terrific yarn, READ THIS BOOK.
This is a delightful collection of stories of men, and their women and families, serving in the Army, Cavalry and Army Medical Corps during the period of the Indian Wars. Living and working in remote, isolated and difficult circumstances in frontier forts in the Dakotas, Nevada, Arizona and Wyoming, the people in these stories come to brilliant life in Kelly's hands. She writes with economy and brevity yet breathes life into her characters so that the reader feels they know each one intimately, their foibles, their fears and their deepest emotions.
Some of the stories are told from the masculine POV and Kelly is a past master at creating male characters of great sympathy and humour. My personal favourite is Capt Jesse MacGregor, a surgeon in Arizona whose story reads like a thrilling dime novel. In "Kathleen Flaherty's Long Winter" we have a shy hero and a heroine who turns tragedy into triumph. "Casually at Post" is the story of a man named God and is written with wit and charm. "A Season for Heros" tells of courage and heroism amongst the famous Buffalo Soldiers and is touching and poignant.
I don't usually read the "western" genre but feel this collection is as good as Nancy Turner's much applauded "These is My Words" or Penelope Williamson's "Hearts of the West". I expect to read this volume again and again and have passed it to the man in my life to read for the themes Kelly writes about are those which are central to all meaningful fiction: honour, courage, pathos, tenderness, humour and meaningful, satisfying personal relationships.
A keeper; please read it and relish the sterling quality of Carla Kelly's beautifully wrought prose.
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At the start of the novel Lydia is a person who spends her life bowing to the wishes of others. She has been cowed by both her mother and an idiotic society. Her life is then slowly changed by a series of hard experiences and added responsibilities. A reviewer below questioned why the hero of the book, Sam Reed, would not help Lydia when he easily could have done so. Well, that's because Carla Kelly has created a hero who is unique in the regency genre. He says nothing because he wants Lydia to know she can succeed on her own, without any help from anyone. Which she does, of course, while the hero is virtually absent from the novel for over forty pages. Is there any other romance novelist who would attempt that?
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The story all begins with Captain Jesse Randall, surgeon to the English army serving in northern Spain against the dreaded French. He has always loved the young Elinore Mason, a poor beauty with heart and soul. He is not your typical war hero with no fear and all about guts and glory. He is a new type of protagonist I've been waiting to read about. He's kind, shy and always thinking of others before himself. Ms. Kelly delves deep into his feelings and really brings readers to love him and want him to survive ALL that he goes through.
I cannot help but think to myself that this book would make the best movie of all time. It is a great war epic that has (of course) all the things that many love to read about: Romance (naturally), intrigue, drama, and action. There was not one character that didn't stop the even flow of the book and every point and detail given in the narratives only helped you understand situations more. I've never read a more "feeling" book than this and this is number one on my recommend list.
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And yet he saves Emma from being gambled in a game of cards. He buys her indenture back and finds himself "owning" a woman he hates. He doesn't treat her as a slave, though, but employs her as his secretary. He never suspects what ideas are up her sleeve, and he isn't careful enough when she makes him sign a document allowing her to reform him and make him a respectable gentleman until he can marry Lady Clarissa Paltridge.
John's growly reaction to Emma's first few actions to lead him to a righteous way of life are hilarious, but soon we realise that he's more willing to obey than he appears. But is his goal to become the gentleman that Lady Paltridge has set her eyes on? Or is he more interested in his reformer than he wants to admit? And can Emma ignore the desire that this dangerous rake stirs in her?
This is another must-read by Carla Kelly. The antagonism between the two main characters makes their journey to love enthralling. John hates the Irish, and yet he will help Emma in her search for her family, supporting her in her search at the Criminal Office. John does all he can to find answers to the questions haunting her. Their friendship is refreshing and proves that even a war between their people can't keep our two heroes apart. I've seen several readers mention that Carla Kelly writes about people before all, and this is true of this novel again.
My one and only regret, although Reforming Lord Ragsdale remains an outstanding novel, is that the first kiss between Emma and John wasn't showed live. The way it was written lessened its impact, I'm afraid, and I wish Carla Kelly had showed us what happened between the characters *when* it happened and not afterwards.
But this nitpick is very much compensated by the depth of character development that Ms Kelly devotes to her every novel. Reforming Lord Ragsdale is no exception when it comes to the quality and care brought to the personalities of both Emma and John.
The title character is quite simply wonderful: he's funny, flawed, deep, and complex. His reformer, Emma, is equally rich and imperfect, and the two together are possibly one of this limited genre's most engaging couples.
I loved this book and couldn't help falling a little in love with Lord Ragsdale - as will anyone else who reads it. It's Carla Kelly's best and will spoil the reader for other Regencies, most of which will seem pallid, silly even, in comparison.
Get a hold of this book any way you can, you'll read it over and over - it's that irresistible!
Ragsdale is a wonderfully complex but sympathetic character, initally seeming to be a dissipated rogue, but we quickly discover that underneath he has a very kind heart despite the episode in his past which makes him predisposed to hate Emma because she is Irish.
Emma is no ordinary servant, despite being in fact a slave (an indentured servant, forced into servitude for no pay for a fixed period). She too has reason to hate the British, and that hate initally becomes focused on Ragsdale as the epitome of that uncaring nation.
But both discover very quickly that first impressions are rarely accurate, and we are given insights into the reactions of both characters as they find themselves reluctantly drawn to each other. And despite the fact that Emma has set herself the task of reforming Lord Ragsdale - which involves healing his pain along the way - she also ends up being the subject of his attempts at reformation.
As someone originally from Ireland, I was very impressed with Kelly's use of Irish history as a backdrop; so many American writers have a tendency to write Irish people and Irish history in a very 'twee,' romanticised manner far divorced from reality. Kelly captures the atmosphere perfectly.
This book is now very difficult to obtain, and I got my copy through an Amazon auction. Now, having read it, I'd have paid twice as much as I did for it, including postage. It's really that good.
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Susan is the daughter of a gentleman, but her father is a gambler and has fallen on hard times. After he lost her family home, Susan was forced to go to live with an aunt, who turned her into an unpaid servant. So, she decides, she might as well get paid for such work, and applies for a job as a lady's companion.
At the home of her employer, Susan meets, not a handsome son who instantly falls in love with her (as more traditional Regencies would have), but her employer's bailiff. A completely unsuitable match for a lady - but why should it be considered unsuitable?
This is why I say this book is more reminiscent of Catherine Cookson's nineteenth-century novels, where these kind of cross-class romances are more commonly found. Kelly provides her usual natural style and occasionally earthy touch to the romance (and I don't just mean in terms of sex scenes; her characters are always well-rounded and she spares no maidenly modesty).
I still prefer her earlier books, but if you're a Carla Kelly fan this one is worth a try.
In The Lady's Companion, she has presented us with Susan Hampton, the daughter of a profligate and selfish baronet who has sqandered his fortune and, therefore, her future amongst her own class. Susan takes courage into both hands and looks for a paid post outside her own circle. She meets the delightful Joel Steinman, proprietor of an employment agency, and is sent to the Dowager Lady Bushnell as a lady's companion. In fact, she has been sent, unbeknownst to her, as a gift from Joel to David Wiggins, former Regimental Sergeant Major, now the bailiff to Lady Bushnell at her manor, Quilling, in the heart of the Cotswolds. This is one thread of the story and it is beguiling in its unfolding.
The battle of Waterloo plays a big role in this story for it colours the actions and the characters of David, Joel, Lady Bushnell and her family. A beautiful metaphorical device, a strain of wheat bred from a handful of grain picked up at La Haye Sainte farmhouse during the battle, becomes a symbol of hope, of forgiveness, of coming to terms with the death, destruction, cowardice, heroism and trial by fire that those who survived must deal with in its aftermath.
All in all, this is a radically different book - nothing like most traditional regencies. It's not just a cross-class romance, it is about endurance, faithfulness, courage and honour. The love the various characters develop for each other is moving and poignant. The ending of the novel is emotional and sad but also full of hope for the future. Despite their superficial differences, Susan and David are well matched.