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Showing posts with label georgette heyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label georgette heyer. Show all posts

Saturday, October 8

Arabella Book Cover

I'm not fond of many old yellowed paperback book covers. They make a book seem so dated and anachronistic. But there is something about this 1960s German illustration of Georgette Heyer's Arabella that seems as fresh and retro as an episode of Mad Men. The ink brush lines are full of explosive energy and yet the figure's back is ramrod straight, as Regency custom dictated. Arabella's expression reminds me of a fresh-faced Audrey Hepburn, whose fame reached its peak around the time this edition of the book was published. And who can fault the artist's smart use of color blocking?  Je t'aime.


Thursday, August 11

Georgette Heyer Books for $1.99 on August 15th in Honor of Her Birthday!!

Tuesday, August 16 would have been Georgette Heyer’s 109th birthday. In honor of this most beloved author, who many call the Queen of Regency Romance, Sourcebooks is discounting EVERY SINGLE one of the eBooks the publisher currently has available to $1.99 for one week, getting Heyer’s Birthday Party started a day early on August 15!
That’s 46 books by Georgette Heyer, plus the fabulous reader companion, Georgette Heyer’s Regency World by Jennifer Kloester, available for $1.99 from August 15-August 21.

This is the perfect time for everyone to read Heyer, and celebrate the woman who was such a prolific author!

Below is the full list of titles, separated by category: regency romance, mystery, historical fiction and non-fiction. And here’s a link with all of the info in this post, as well as a look at those gorgeous covers: http://www.sourcebooks.com/readers/casavip/happy-birthday-ms-heyer.html . The eBooks will be available through Sourcebooks.com and major eBook retailers (and please give them some extra time if prices aren’t adjusted right away on Monday—this is a long list and a lot of data to update J). Sourcebook's Heyer celebration begins Monday, August 15th and ends August 21st!!!! Enjoy!!

Georgette Heyer
Hip Hip Heyer!

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MS. HEYER!
eBooks Available for $1.99
August 15-August 21, 2011
Heyer’s Birthday: August 16, 2011

REGENCY ROMANCE

1. Arabella

2. Bath Tangle

3. Beauvallet

4. The Black Moth

5. Black Sheep

6. Charity Girl

7. The Convenient Marriage

8. The Corinthian

9. Cotillion

10. Cousin Kate

11. Devil’s Cub

12. False Colours

13. Faro’s Daughter

14. The Foundling

15. Frederica

16. Friday’s Child

17. The Grand Sophy

18. Lady of Quality

19. The Masqueraders

20. The Nonesuch

21. Powder and Patch

22. The Quiet Gentleman

23. Regency Buck

24. The Reluctant Widow

25. Sylvester

26. The Talisman Ring

27. These Old Shades

28. Venetia

MYSTERY

29. Behold, Here’s Poison

30. A Blunt Instrument

31. Death in the Stocks

32. Detection Unlimited

33. Duplicate Death

34. Envious Casca

35. Footsteps in the Dark

36. No Wind of Blame

37. Penhallow

38. They Found Him Dead

39. Unfinished Clue

40. Why Shoot a Butler?


HISTORICAL FICTION
41. The Conqueror

42. An Infamous Army

43. My Lord John

44. Royal Escape

45. Simon the Coldheart

46. Spanish Bride

NON-FICTION
47. Georgette Heyer's Regency World


Friday, July 30

Georgette Heyer Event Schedule at Austenprose

Sun Aug 01 Event intro, Werksman Interview, Review of Georgette Heyer’s Regency World on Jane Austen's World and Austenprose

Mon Aug 02 The Black Moth, Aarti – Books Lust; Powder and Patch, Lucy – Enchanted by Josephine

Wed Aug 04 These Old Shades, Keira – Love Romance Passion; The Masqueraders, Helen – She Reads Novels

Fri Aug 06 Devil's Cub, Meredith – Austenesque Reviews; The Convenient Marriage, Laurel – Austenprose

Sun Aug 08 Regency Buck, Susan Scott – Historical fiction author; The Talisman Ring, Ana – An Evening at Almack’s

Mon Aug 09 An Infamous Army, Elaine Simpson Long – Random Jottings of a Book and Opera Lover; The Spanish Bride, Kelly – Jane Austen Sequel Examiner

Wed Aug 11 The Corinthian, Danielle – A Work in Progress; Faro's Daughter, Joanna – Regency Romantic

Fri Aug 13 The Reluctant Widow, Jane Greensmith – Reading, Writing, Working, Playing; The Foundling, Claire – The Captive Reader

Sun Aug 15 Arabella, Kara Louise – Austenesque author; The Grand Sophy, Meg – Write Meg

Mon Aug 16 Interview with Vic – Jane Austen’s World; Friday's Child, Vic – Jane Austen’s World

Wed Aug 18 The Quiet Gentleman, Deb Barnum – Jane Austen in Vermont; Cotillion, Alexa Adams – First Impressions

Fri Aug 20 The Toll-Gate, Laura – Laura’s Review; Bath Tangle, Deb Barnum – Jane Austen in Vermont

Sun Aug 22 Sprig Muslin, Laura – Laura’s Reviews; April Lady, Becky Laney – Becky’s Book Reviews

Mon Aug 23 Sylvester, or the Wicked Uncle, Laurel Ann – Austenprose; Venetia, Laurel Ann – Austenprose

Wed Aug 25 The Unknown Ajax, Brooke – The Bluestocking Guide; A Civil Contract, Elaine Simpson Long – Random Jottings of a Book and Opera Lover

Fri Aug 27 The Nonesuch, Marie – Burton Review; False Colours, Kristen – BookNAround

Sun Aug 29 Frederica, Nicole – Linus’ Blanket; Black Sheep, Katherine – November’s Autumn

Mon Aug 30 Cousin Kate, Chris – Book-A-Rama; Charity Girl, Dana Huff – Much Madness is Divinest Sense

Tues Aug 31 Lady of Quality, Elizabeth Hanbury – Regency romance author; Heyer Vintage Covers

Event wrap-up

Sat Sep 07 Giveaway winners announced


Wednesday, July 28

Georgette Heyer Celebration at Austenprose

‘Celebrating Georgette Heyer’ at Austenprose – August 1st - 31st, 2010

Stylish, witty and historically accurate, novelist Georgette Heyer has been delighting readers with her romantic comedies for eighty-nine years. In honor of her birthday on August 16th, Austenprose.com www.austenprose.com will feature a month long event ‘Celebrating Georgette Heyer’ featuring thirty-four book reviews of her romance novels, guest blogs, interviews of Heyer enthusiast from the blog-o-sphere, academia and publishing and tons of great giveaways.

Vic (that's me) of Jane Austen’s World and Jane Austen Today, and Deb Werksman, acquiring editor of Sourcebook Casablanca and the catalyst in re-introducing Heyer to a new generation of readers will be interviewed for their knowledge about the author.

The festivities start August first with a review of the newly re-issued Georgette Heyer’s Regency World, by Jennifer Kloester. Don’t be a wet goose. Chase away that fit of the blue-devils by attending this bon ton affair.

Click here to enter Austenprose

Thursday, February 18

Risky Regencies Georgette Heyer Read Along

Risky Regencies asks for your input in choosing the next read along book, which will be something by Georgette Heyer. Click on the link below and vote for the book of your choice. Or click on the above link and leave a comment on the site. After all the votes are tallied, join the gang in a group read of a novel by a wonderful Regency author.

Poll: Vote for the Heyer Title you'd like to read

Sunday, August 16

Happy Birthday, Georgette Heyer!

Georgette Heyer was born in Wimbledon 107 years ago today! In her long life she graced us with over 50 novels. To celebrate, we'd like to direct you to several sites:

Austenprose has reviewed Richard Armitage reading one of my favorite Georgette Heyer books for Naxos Audio Books, Sylvester, or the Wicked Uncle. Click here to read Laurel Ann's review.

Our recent reviews of The Grand Sophy sit in these links.

Georgette Heyer is tweeting her 1922 short story, A Proposal to Cicely at this twitter account. To read the story so far, click here.

Georgette's first book, The Black Moth, is offered as a free ebook by Girlebooks. Click here.


Sourcebooks has reissued a spate of Georgette Heyer books in the past two years. Click here to order them.

Two of my favorite Georgette Heyer sites are:


Posted by Vic, Jane Austen's World

Monday, July 27

Author Michele Ann Young Chats About Her Life Long Love of Georgette Heyer, and The Grand Sophy

Gentle Readers: The Grand Sophy, Georgette Heyer's 1950 novel was re-released on July 1st by Sourcebooks. In celebration, please join us in welcoming author Michele Ann Young who will chat about how Regency romance author Georgette Heyer fired her desire to write Regency romances.

Among all of the authors I love to read, I do wish I might have met Georgette Heyer. I could think of a hundred questions to ask her, and not just about her research, but about character development and story ideas.

My father introduced me to Ms. Heyer’s books when I was a teen and we would wrestle for first dibs on whichever book he’d brought home from the library. I read The Grand Sophy then and have read it many times since, along with her other books.

Georgette Heyer’s novels fired my desire to write Regencies. The world she created came alive and drew me in. One of the things she does so brilliantly is bring the people of the day to life in a reader’s mind. The Grand Sophy not only transports us to the London of the ton, but her history is impeccable and laced with references to the important people of the era, from Wellington to Prinny. Events such as Waterloo and the Congress of Vienna set the backdrop for her characters’ conversations.

While fictional, her finely drawn characters are true to their time: her heroines are strong resourceful women within the confines of the time period, and her heroes are men we would all want to meet on the marriage mart. It doesn’t take Sophy, our protagonist of The Grand Sophy, a moment to recognize that Charles Rivenhall, while handsome and worthy, is in need of rescue from a disaster of his own making, or that she is the woman for the task. Charles, on the other hand, shows great restraint and a sense of humor. He is instantly likable given his unwanted responsibility for a large family at a time when he should be enjoying life. This is a theme is several of her novels. The banter between Sophy and Charles, along with the underlying spark when they drive out for the first time is classic Heyer wit.

When asked about influences on my writing, she is always at the top of the list. Something must have rubbed off from my reading over the years, for while our styles are different and our stories are our own, readers and reviewers often remark on my level of comfort in portraying the Regency era. I am delighted to see her works being reissued, and will make sure I have all of her books on my keeper shelf.

Thank you Michele Ann for sharing your appreciation of this great author with us today.

Author Bio

An army brat, born and raised in England, Michèle Ann Young now lives and writes in Canada. She has four Regency novels currently in print. Her most recent with Sourcebooks Casablanca is The Lady Flees Her Lord, October 2008, Sourcebooks, Casablanca. When Michèle is not reading her favorite Georgette Heyer novels, or writing her own, she loves researching Regency facts for her books. If you would like to know more about Michèle Ann Young, her books and her research visit her blog Regency Ramble.

Only four more day to Enter a chance to win one of five copies of The Grand Sophy and a set of ten Georgette Heyer novels from Sourcebooks. Don’t delay. The contest ends July 31st.

Read Vic's review of The Grand Sophy at Jane Austen's World

Read Laurel Ann's review of The Grand Sophy at Austenprose

Monday, July 20

Georgette Heyer Continues to Inspire New Authors: The Grand Sophy Guest Blog with Romance Author Mary Margret Daughtridge

Gentle Readers: The Grand Sophy by Georgette Heyer was re-released on July 1st by Sourcebooks. Joining us today is romance author Mary Margret Daughtridge who will chat about how Regency romance author Georgette Heyer continues to inspire her writing of contemporary romances today.

A SEAL contemporary might seem like a far cry from a Georgette Heyer Regency, but it was Georgette Heyer who single-handedly converted me to romance--more years ago than I care to admit to. I would reread her books until the pages were soft and frayed and falling out, and then go buy a new one. Unfortunately, they were out of print in the eighties and nineties, so a "new" one could only be found in a used bookstore. Even after all these years, I would have to say Heyer's is the strongest influence on my writing. Just the other day I was thinking about how Sophy shoots one of the other characters with the best of intentions -- and with very good results.

Heyer is always aware that a story is about people, not the plot. She creates humor not by contrived situations but by letting characters reveal themselves, and as a result it never goes stale. I can (and have) reread her books over and over and laugh every time.

In fact, one of the funniest scenes I ever read happens in The Grand Sophy when the hero complains that Sophy has compared his fiancée to a horse. He counters that he considers his fiancée’s countenance particularly well-bred. “Oh,she reassures him, “I meant a particularly well-bred horse!

As the argument becomes more and more ridiculous, he sees for himself how narrow-minded he has become, which provides the opening for a change of heart.

I'm so thrilled Sourcebooks is reissuing Heyer, and letting a new generation of romance fans and writers discover her.

The Grand Sophy is one of her best.

Thank you Mary Margret for sharing your appreciation of this great author with us today.

Author Bio

Mary Margret Daughtridge is the author of the SEAL Series: SEALed with a Kiss (April 2008) and SEALed with a Promise (April 2009), contemporary romance novels featuring stories of Navy SEALS, hard men with soft hearts, published by Sourcebooks Casablanca. She has been a grade school teacher, speech therapist, family educator, biofeedback therapist, and Transpersonal Hypnotherapist. She is a member of Heart of Carolina Romance Writers, Romance Writers of America, and Romancing the Military Soul, and is a sought-after judge in writing contests. She resides in North Carolina. You can visit Mary Margret at her website and read excerts of her novels.

Enter a chance to win one of five copies of The Grand Sophy and a set of ten Georgette Heyer novels from Sourcebooks. Don’t delay. The contest ends July 31st.

Read Vic's review of The Grand Sophy at Jane Austen's World

Saturday, June 27

Seen On the Blogosphere

Georgette Heyer is tweeting The Grand Sophy on Twitter! Follow her as the book is being released. Sample tweet: "He is the kind of odious little toad who kisses the housemaids on the stairs." Click here to read the tweets.


In addition, seen at Wimbledon: Two yummy men. Jonny Lee Miller, our future Mr. Knightley, and Jude Law.

Friday, June 12

Seen On the Blogosphere: Heyer Better than Austen?


While doing background research for Georgette Heyer, I ran across this statement:
"I don’t quite remember when I started reading this book [Friday's Child], probably at the end of June or beginning of July and I only finished it tonight! I’m already not a fan of romance books but I thought I’d give this book a try as it was sent from Sourcebooks. This was my first Georgette Heyer book and at least, it’s better than Austen."
Let's hope this writer is absurdly naive and young and that she is just beginning to flex her critic's muscles. Heyer, as serious readers will agree, is most definitely not "better" than Austen. Had this young person written that Heyer's books are fun, breezier, and easier to comprehend, I would not have given her statement a second thought. For those who have difficulty reading Jane Austen's 19th century language or understanding Regency customs and etiquette, Georgette Heyer's books provide a rollicking introduction to understanding that bygone time. Sherwood Smith observes:

"If a person has read enough Heyer and others who emulate her, he or she ought not to find Austen's language impenetrable, and will probably be able to comprehend the wit. Anyone who loves, say, Friday's Child ought to laugh out loud at the absurdities of Mrs. Norris, or enjoy the sly selfishness of Isabella Thorpe--or recognize how John Dashwood, so continually worried about his position in society, becomes more servile than his servants."

While Georgette Heyer does not possess Jane Austen's immense literary stature, one can be assured that her novels are historically accurate. An Infamous Army is so true to life (every line uttered by Wellington in the novel is attributed to the real-life man), that it was rumoured to have been on the reading list for the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst.

Sourcebooks has been reissuing Georgette Heyer's frothy regency romances, allowing me to fall in love with the author's works all over again. For my review of The Corinthian, go to Jane Austen's World.

Coming soon from Sourcebooks: The Grand Sophy. I consider this novel to be one of her best and have been Twittering about it at this link.

Saturday, June 6

The Grand Sophy

The Grand Sophy will be reissued by SourceBooks in July. Look for our reviews and special promotions to celebrate this event. The novel is one of Heyer's best and the plot is full of fun twists and witty dialogue. When Lady Ombersley agrees to take in her young niece, she expects to meet a meek and well-mannered young girl, not the lively, well-traveled sophisticate who lands on her doorstep with a dog, birdcage, and monkey in tow. Sophy, who takes the ton by storm, quickly discovers that the Ombersley family is dysfunctional at best. Her cousin Cecelia is in love with a talentless poet, her other cousin Charles is a tyrannical stuffed shirt, and her younger cousins are in desperate need of some fun and freedom. By the end of the novel, Sophy has set everyone on the right path (well, sort of), including Charles, whose heart she has stolen.

This excerpt on Georgette Heyer.com offers a typical exchange between Sophy and Miss Wraxton, Charles's uptight fiancee. As we await the novel's publication, I will be writing about The Grand Sophy on Twitter with submissions like these: Tilly, her governess, died in Vienna. "A devilishly inconvenient thing to do, but I daresay she didn't mean it," Sophy's pa explained. C-1

To follow Sophy's adventures, you can find my twitter updates on the sidebar of Jane Austen's World or you can click on this link .

Posted by Vic, Jane Austen's World

Wednesday, May 20

Seen on the Blogosphere: Books Galore

Jane Austen Books.net Fabulous site where you can order all things Jane Austen. Check it out.

And Girlebooks offers another Georgette Heyer ebook for free: These Old Shades, which is a quasi sequel to The Black Moth, also a free ebook.

Austen fans offers a cheat sheet on Georgette Heyer. Click here.

Posted Vic, Jane Austen's World

Thursday, May 14

The Talisman Ring by Georgette Heyer, A Review

Gentle Readers,

My fellow Janeite on the James colleague, Hillary, read The Talisman Ring and reviewed it for you in this post. This 1936 novel was one of Georgette Heyer's earlier efforts. The light-hearted romp - full of comedic twists and double entendres - was set in Sussex, where the author lived at the time.

The Talisman Ring
is one of Georgette Heyer's earliest novels, and as a genre bender, it holds a unique place in her work. Not merely a romance, the book is also a mystery and a detective novel, with a soupçon of action and adventure thrown in (including a wild ride through the English woods, an encounter with a band of smugglers, and a little old-fashioned breaking and entering). Moreover, instead of one pair of lovers, Heyer provides us with two. In the first chapter, the practical Sir Tristram Shield dutifully promises his dying uncle that he will marry and provide for his cousin Eustacie, a young noblewoman raised in France and not at all grateful for a rescue from the guillotine if it means being condemned to the quiet country environs of Lavenham Court. Soon Sir Tristram is acting as executor of the estate, since the rightful heir, hot-headed Ludovic Lavensham, has fled the country under suspicion of murder. When Eustacie runs away from home and encounters Ludovic, Sir Tristram's vow to his uncle is placed in imminent danger. Conveniently, the intrepid Miss Sarah Thane – a lady traveler lodging at the local inn along with her comically obtuse brother (a jolly good fellow who happens to be a justice of the peace) – sets her cap for Sir Tristram. Add to the mix the absurdly foppish Beau Lavenham, a rival for the inheritance of Lavenham Court and the attention of the ladies, and thus begins the search for the talisman ring, a token that might prove Ludovic's innocence . . . and another's guilt.

This reader's overall impression of the book is one of frivolity: quite a bit of fun with very little substance. While Eustacie's girlish romanticism is to be expected, the supposedly older and wiser Sarah Thane turns out to be just as silly, perfectly willing to masquerade as a dull-witted antiques enthusiast in order to help search for secret hideaways in the wainscoting of a suspect's home library. Even the most intriguing historical details, such as the introduction of the Bow Street Runners, forerunners of modern detectives, are handled with a comic touch, as the two Runners find their investigations foiled by Eustacie and Sarah's enthusiastic amateur efforts. One can imagine that Heyer took great delight in researching the excesses of men's period attire, which manifest themselves in combinations as bizarre as primrose pantaloons and a lilac-striped coat, topped off by a fur-lined cloak and sugarloaf hat. Ultimately, one can well sympathize with the beleaguered Sir Tristram and the bewildered Sir Hugh Thane, who remarks peevishly that "This is the queerist inn I've ever stayed at in my life."

Amidst all of these humorous flourishes, the reader may be willing to forego more plausible storylines or fully rounded characters. The Talisman Ring is not a great novel, but rather a light-hearted romp that promises smiles to the pleasure reader.
Posted by Vic, Jane Austen's World

Tuesday, March 17

New Georgette Heyer Novels in the Queue

The Queen of Regency Georgette Heyer is set to reign in 2009. Sourcebooks is releasing Georgette's regency novels and mysteries in the following order:

January: Frederica - Frederica is full of surprises! (Read Vic's review here)

When Frederica brings her younger siblings to London determined to secure a brilliant marriage for her beautiful sister, she seeks out their distant cousin the Marquis of Alverstoke. Frederica makes such a strong impression that to his own amazement, the Marquis agrees to help launch them all into society.With his enterprising - and altogether entertaining - country cousins getting into one scrape after another right on his doorstep, before he knows it the Marquis finds himself dangerously embroiled...

February: A Convenient Marriage - before she knew it, the bride found herself in deep trouble.

When the Earl of Rule proposes marriage to her sister Lizzie, Horatia offers herself instead. Her sister is already in love with someone else, and Horatia is willing to sacrifice herself for her family's happiness. Everyone knows she's no beauty, but she'll do her best to keep out of the Earl's way and make him a good wife. And then the Earl's archenemy, Sir Robert, sets out to ruin her reputation...Unbeknownst to Horatia, the Earl is enchanted by her. There's simply no way he's going to let her get into trouble…

Behold, Here’s Poison
(mystery): Meet the Matthews - before the next one dies...

It's no ordinary morning at the Poplars - the master is found dead in his bed, and it seems his high blood pressure was not the cause. When an autopsy reveals a sinister poison, it's up to the quietly resourceful Inspector Hannasyde to catch the murderer in time to spare the next victim. But every single member of the quarrelsome Matthews family has a motive and none, of course, has an alibi.

March: The Talisman Ring

When spirited Eustacie stumbles into a band of smugglers, she is delighted to be having an adventure at last. Their leader, young heir Ludovic Lavenham, is in hiding, falsely accused of murder. Pursued by the law, Eustacie and Ludovic find refuge at an unassuming country inn.

The resourceful Miss Sarah Thane and the clear-thinking Sir Tristram Shield gamely endeavor to prevent Ludovic's arrest and Eustacie's ruin as the four conspire to recover the missing talisman ring that will clear Ludovic's name.

Unfinished Clue (mystery): A houseful of people he loathes is not Sir Arthur's worst problem…

It should have been a lovely English country-house weekend. But the unfortunate guest-list is enough to exasperate a saint, and the host, Sir Arthur Billington-Smith, is an abusive wretch hated by everyone from his disinherited son to his wife's stoic would-be lover. When Sir Arthur is found stabbed to death, no one is particularly grieved—and no one has an alibi. The unhappy guests fi nd themselves under the scrutiny of Scotland Yard's cool-headed Inspector Harding, who has solved tough cases before—but this time, the talented young inspector discovers much more than he's bargained for.

April: The Nonesuch

"On the shelf" at 28, Ancilla Trent considers her opportunity for romance and adventure to be behind her. She strives to be a calming influence on her tempestuous charge, but Tiffany Wield's bad behavior culminates in an impetuous flight to London without a chaperone. It falls to Ancilla and Sir Waldo Hawkridge, one of the wealthiest bachelors in London , to join forces and stop Tiffany's flight before she does irreparable damage to her reputation. Together, they of course discover that neither is too old for love.

Why Shoot a Butler ? (mystery): When local barrister Frank Amberley takes a wrong turn on his way to visit his aunt and uncle and accidentally discovers a murder, he impulsively protects the young woman he meets at the crime scene. In the course of ferreting out the killer, his disdain for the bumbling police adds comic relief, and he displays true brilliance at solving the crime. Heyer's first big success in the mystery category, originally published in 1933 and not available in the US market in at least five years.


May: My Lord John (Historical) - Georgette Heyer's final novel, set in her own favorite time period.

With her signature wit, drama and impeccable historical accuracy, Georgette Heyer tells the story of a medieval royal family on the rise. Set in the last days of the reign of Richard II, just before Henry V succeeded him to the throne, the eponymous hero is Henry's brother, John, Duke of Bedford. Heyer brings the medieval world to life, creating a panoramic view of a royal family's intricacies, intrigues and sibling rivalries, along with the everyday lives of the servants, clerics, and vassals in their charge.

Cousin Kate: Enjoy one of only two Heyer Gothic Regency romances.

Kate, in dire circumstances, is surprised to receive an invitation to live with a distant aunt. Her aunt, uncle, and cousin welcome her to their estate, buy her new clothes, and provide all the amenities a Young lady of quality should have. Slowly, however, as strange events unfold, Kate begins to realize that her aunt's apparent benevolence hides an ulterior motive. To assure succession of the title, her aunt intends Kate to marry her cousin Torquil, until his increasingly bizarre behavior culminates in violence and tragedy. A compelling tale exploring mental illness in the Regency period.

June: The Corinthian - Sparkling wit with a Shakespearean twist.

Walking home at dawn, quite drunk, Sir Richard Wyndham encounters heiress Penelope Creed climbing out her window. She is running away from a dreaded marriage to her fish-lipped cousin, while Sir Richard himself is contemplating a loveless marriage with a woman his friends have compared to a cold poultice. Sir Richard can't allow her to careen about the countryside unchaperoned, even in the guise of a boy, so he pretends to be her tutor and takes her on a fine adventure. When their stagecoach overturns, they find themselves embroiled with thieves, at the center of a murder investigation, and finally, in love.

JULY: THE GRAND SOPHY!! (More on this most splendid of Georgette's novels later.)

Monday, December 1

Twelve Gifts of Christmas

Inquiring readers, During this month of holiday celebrations, Laurel Ann and I will be offering the Twelve Gifts of Christmas. Some of the gifts will be giveaways, others will be free offerings online, and still others will be great gift ideas for you to give to others. None are expensive, but every gift will have a special relationship to this blog, us, or Jane Austen. Continuing with the Georgette Heyer theme which we started several weeks ago, here is
Gift Number One:

The Black Moth, A Romance of the 18th Century, by Georgette Heyer

The Black Moth, Georgette Heyer's first book, was published in 1921. Although it is not one of her best efforts, an allowance must be made, for she created the story when she was just seventeen years of age. According to Jay Dixon, web author of An Appreciation of Georgette Heyer, Georgette first told the story to her brother Boris when she accompanied him on a convalescent holiday at Hastings. She "started telling him an historical adventure tale [set in the Georgian era] to relieve his (and presumably her) boredom. Her father encouraged her to write it down and, when completed, sent it to the literary agent Leonard P. Moore, an acquaintance of his. Moore promptly sold it to Constable in England and Houghton Mifflin in the USA." Just recently the copyright expired in the U.S., and thus The Black Moth is available for free as an e-text and as a podcast recording. If you have already read the book, you might want to join the online discussion forum: These Old Boards.

Posted by Vic, Jane Austen's World and Laurel Ann, Austenprose

Friday, November 28

The Reluctant Widow, by Georgette Heyer: A Book Review

"The Reluctant Widow is one of [Georgette Heyer's] most light-hearted books, with some unusually broad comedy and a delicious merry war between its commonsense heroine and hero whom she describes as, 'The most odious, overbearing, inconsiderate, abominable man I ever met.'" - Aiken Hodge, p. 68*


An honest mistake – that of entering the wrong coach – brings Miss Elinor Rochdale to a musty dilapidated mansion in the dark of night instead of to the house where she is expected to begin her position as governess to two young children. A butler escorts her to the library, where a nattily dressed man stands in front of the fireplace. Elinor and the stranger embark on a lively verbal exchange based on a series of misunderstandings, for he believes she has responded to his advertisement for a wife, and Elinor believes he is the husband of the woman who hired her for her services.

It turns out that the man is Lord Carlyon, the responsible older brother of a tribe of siblings and the legal guardian of his alcoholic nephew. Lord Carlyon asks Elinor to marry the dissolute young man so that he may escape the suspicion of coveting his relative’s house and lands. He assures her that the marriage would be in name only, and that she stands to gain more than lose in this devil’s bargain, for his nephew is not long for this world. Elinor, horrified with such a scheme, wishes only to find the quickest way out of this scrape. But she is penniless and alone, and at the mercy of this stranger's kindness.

Then events beyond both Elinor and Carlyon‘s control take the decision out of their hands, and Elinor is speedily married to a baseless character who could scarcely be bothered to look at her, for his motivation in marrying her is revenge and hatred for Carlyon. By morning Elinor's husband lies dead, and so begins The Reluctant Widow. Sourcebooks is releasing seven of Georgette Heyer's regency and historical novels just in time for the holidays, including this delightful GH romance novel, which I heartily recommend.

The Reluctant Widow is among the GH novels that features a mature couple, though when I say mature I am speaking in Regency terms. At 26, Miss Elinor Rochdale considers herself to be firmly on the shelf. And although our hero cannot be much older than she, he has been head of his family for so long that his demeanor is (dare I say it?) a bit directive. We know from the moment that our feisty Elinor meets the immovable object named Ned Carlyon, which of these two strong personalities will have the upper hand. However, we are always sympathetic towards our poor heroine, who has found herself in the most trying of circumstances. After her father so disobligingly gambled the family fortune away and committed suicide, her fiancee ditched her! Instead of succumbing to the vapours, our plucky heroine has made the best of her situation with a "can do" attitude that Carlyon quietly recognizes and admires. Unaware of his feelings, she lets him know that she is incensed to be the widow of a man who was universally loathed, and when she discovers that her new house can be entered through a secret stairway, and that a foul spy plot has put her life in danger, she does not hesitate to speak her mind regarding our hero's seeming lack of concern for her safety; but her words roll over Carlyon like water over a labrador retriever's coat and they do not seem to penetrate his thick skull or ruffle his calm assurances, which infuriate her even more.

Georgette wrote this novel in 1946 when she was on a roll and writing one book after another. Few authors can rival her ability to introduce new characters in an unforgettable way. Read how she introduces Francis Cheviot, an Exquisite who has just descended from his carriage and is standing at the front door:

“Crawley, I do trust that you have rung that bell, for if I stand in this disagreeable wind you know I shall take cold, and my colds always descend upon my chest. How thoughtless it was in you to have handed me down from the chaise until the door had been opened! Ah, here is that deplorable henchman! Yes, Barrow, it is I indeed. Take my hat – no, Crawley had best take my hat, perhaps. And yet, if he does so, who is to assist me out of my greatcoat? How difficult all these arrangements are! Ah, a happy thought! You have laid my hat down, Crawley! I do not know where I should be without you. Now my coat, and pray be careful! Where is a mirror? Crawley, you cannot have been so foolish as to have packed all my hand-mirrors! No I thought not: hold it a little higher, I beg of you, and give me my comb! Yes, that will serve, Barrow, you may announce me to your mistress!”


Shades of Sir Walter Elliot in Persuasion! In our first glimpse of Francis (with foreshadowing from the main characters) the reader knows that he will play a devious part in the as yet unsolved mystery. One reviewer complained about the number of exclamation marks that GH is wont to use; but this long-time fan has come to expect them and considers them a hallmark of her writing style. Besides, why quibble about a few exclamation points when they lead to such delicious fun?

Other memorable characters the reader can expect to encounter are Carlyon's younger brother Nicky, whose high-spirited antics were inspired by Georgette Heyer's son, Richard (or so some say), who was still in his teens when this novel was written. Nicky's older brother John plays an integral part in the spy mystery. He is as sober and meticulous as Nicky is reckless. And then there are Bouncer, Nicky's dog, who plays a comedic and accurately portrayed canine role; and Miss Beccles, Elinor's former governess, who has come to live with her as her companion. Miss Beccles' astute observations about his lordship's character, which clue the reader in on how kind-hearted and generous Carlyon really is, clash diametrically with Elinor's viewpoint, leaving the reader to wonder when Elinor's eyes will be opened.

One guarantee about a Georgette Heyer novel is that the reader will always be treated to an intricate plot in which no thread is left to dangle. This Heyer tale is more convoluted than most and though it contains those dark elements that characterize a Gothic novel, the combination of broad comedy, dark mystery, and spirited romance make this particular reading experience an unforgettable one. My only quibble with the novel is that we do not see enough of Elinor and Carlyon together. As with Sleepless in Seattle I kept hoping that our hero and heroine would finally realize their love for each other, but when this momentous event occurred, the scene was all too short and the novel ended much too swiftly to completely warm the romantic cockles of my heart. All my other cockles, however, were more than satisfied.

My rating? Four and a half out of five regency fans.

A comment about Mark 1 and Mark 2 heroes:

Georgette Heyer rated her heroes as Mark 1 or Mark 2. The best definition I could find about these two heroic types was this one by Alias Clio on The Other World:

"The Mark I hero is the conventionally unconventional hero of women's romance: he is older, attractively dishevelled, ruggedly handsome, funny in a dry sort of way, and occasionally rather rude in his defiance of social mores. He may have a hint of scandal in his past, but he is in full command of himself and his feelings. The Mark II hero is Mark I's opposite, sometimes his foil. He is not necessarily handsome but is always exquisitely groomed (as Freddy [Cotillion] is), young, a good dancer, and never fails to observe the conventions. Although he seldom says anything funny on purpose, he is often unintentionally hilarious.

I suppose some people might say that Mark I is a classic alpha male, while Mark II is clearly a Beta. Yet Heyer evidently finds both types of men equally attractive, in different ways. In some of her novels she allows Mark I to win all the prizes, making Mark II appear shallow, silly, and foppish. In others, Mark II shows up the selfishness and egotism of Mark I and his disregard for the social order, and steals the show away from him.

I wonder if the Mark II type of hero was perhaps a popular phenomenon, a "trope", even, in English light fiction of the first half of the twentieth century, and a harbinger of a cultural shift. He is not of a type likely to appeal to North American taste, but he appears repeatedly in one form or another in the novels of the Twenties and Thirties."

From the above description, I would say that Carlyon shows characteristics of both hero types, although Jane Aiken Hodge characterizes him as a Mark 2 hero. For those who have read the book, do you have any thoughts on the topic?

For those who have not read this thoroughly entertaining Regency romp, you can click on the following link to order the book.

Click on More Book Links Here:
Our Other Georgette Heyer Reviews Sit Below
These Georgette Heyer books, available this holiday season, will be reviewed on this blog and Jane Austen's World through mid-December: Cotillion, Simon the Coldheart, The Reluctant Widow, Faro's Daughter, and The Conqueror.

Cotillion, Simon the Coldheart, The Reluctant Widow, Faro's Daugher, and The Conqueror

*The Private World of Georgette Heyer, Jane Aiken Hodge, The Bodley Head, Ltd, London, 1984.

Wednesday, July 16

The Spanish Bride: A Georgette Heyer Historical Novel

Inquiring readers, this Georgette Heyer novel was reviewed by my co-founder of Janeites on the James, Miss Anne. She will be the first person to admit that she is addicted to reading Ms. Heyer's novels before she nods off to sleep. In fact, Miss Anne's collection of Georgette Heyer's novels is more extensive than my own. (And that is saying something.) Here, then, is her review of one of Georgette Heyer's most acclaimed historical novels, The Spanish Bride, recently reissued by SourceBooks.

Few Romance novelists of any era would set an Author’s Note citing the main works of reference she used in researching the book, beginning with the autobiography of the romantic hero of the novel and including diarists whom we will meet in the pages, as well as Wellington’s Dispatches. And possibly no other Romance novelist would start her story – a highly romantic one, at that – with a lengthy and accurate portrayal of the siege and fall of Badajos, one of the most difficult battles of the arduous Peninsular campaign, where Wellington made his mark.

But Georgette Heyer was never the typical Romance writer. And this book, which is called a novel and marketed as a romance, is far closer to biography than fiction. The characters were real. Their own words, transposed into a coherent whole, tell the almost fantastic story of the 14 year old young woman of high birth, Juana Los Dolores de Leon, whose family home had been destroyed by the looters, and whose sister, the only one left of the family, turned to her acquaintances in the British Army, Lord Wellington and several of his aides, for her protection. As it turned out, when they came to the British camp, she met young Captain Harry Smith, a Brigade-Major in Wellington’s army. They married two days later, with Wellington in attendance, and within two more days, were on the march.

The Spanish Bride takes us through the rest of the war in Spain and into France, when Napoleon resigned and was sent to Elba. It continues with Harry Smith’s trip to America where he took part in the War of 1812 – showing clearly its place as a part of the Napoleonic Wars – and then, as the finale, some of the skirmishes of the Battle of Waterloo. The book ends there, but the Smiths lived a long and interesting life, in South Africa and India. Harry ended his career as a Major-General, and was knighted for his actions in India. Juana went with him wherever he was, and made friends everywhere; Ladysmith, in South Africa, is named in her honor. Georgette Heyer came across Harry’s autobiography while she was researching another book and was fascinated with the romantic story of the couple’s meeting, marriage, and life together. Her telling of their story in The Spanish Bride has not been one of her more popular books; in truth it is more a military campaign than a romance. But the love story of Harry and Juana Smith is fascinating.

We see Harry and his fellow officers through their own words. Juana is very much seen through their eyes. Convent-reared and frighteningly young, she tumbled into the life of the Army and carried herself as a brave soldier:

If Harry had doubted Juana’s ability to keep up with the division or to bear with equanimity the fatigue of long marches, and the discomfort of primitive lodgings, his doubts were very soon put to rest. She was a born campaigner. She rode her Portuguese horse in the rear of the column…when Harry went ahead, and never a murmur of complaint was heard to pass her lips. Unused to riding, she was, during those first days, so stiff and cramped when she was lifted down from her saddle that sometimes her legs would not bear her, and she would have fallen had no arm been there to support her. But there was always an arm…She had a genius for making friends and this quality in her, coupled with the romantic circumstances of her marriage (the story of which was, in a very short time, known to everyone in the division), made her an interesting figure. The men’s imaginations were fired before ever they saw her; when they became familiar with her friendly smile, and saw how her gallant, erect little figure never sagged in the saddle, they took her to their hearts and were even pleased when she rode with the column, a thing not generally popular with infantry regiments.

This is not to say that they did not quarrel – both had fiery tempers – but they were also soul mates. As long as Harry told her, or rather, ordered her, she would do it. She feared for his life in any of the battles, and for good reason, but she recognized – convent upbringing was to her advantage here – that his duties and responsibilities came first.

After Toulouse, Captain Smith was recommended for duty in America, and for the only time in their marriage, he left her behind. Juana’s sojourn in London was lonely, but as she did not speak English, she did not wish to go to his family until she and they could converse. When Harry brought dispatches for the Prince Regent from the war in America, his promotion to Major came through, and he took her to his home, where all of the Smiths were enchanted with her. She stayed with his family when he returned to America; Smith was at the Battle of New Orleans, indeed, carried the surrender papers to Jackson and was mentioned in dispatches for his outstanding work, before returning to England, just in time to hurry to Belgium. They arrived there as the epic final battle was beginning; the final scene is of Juana desperately searching for her husband through the grisly fields of that bloody battle.

Heyer’s easy prose makes the sometimes confusing military campaigns interesting. The casual interspersing of comments from the diarists keep the pace quick and interest high. She is well known for her interest in the Peninsular campaign – indeed, she made all of her most interesting fictional heroes veterans of the war. She had a well-documented desire to be more than a romance writer, and this is one of the books where she sought to expand her scope.

But most readers of the romance novel are more interested in drawing room intrigue than military tactics, no matter how interestingly depicted, and will not share her interest in the extended battles and the privations of camp life. And that is too bad. The extended Napoleonic wars brought about considerable change in the fashions and mores of the western world, and Heyer shows this throughout her books. Nowhere else and at no other time could a gently-reared high-born woman follow the drum and stay with her husband, the only person is the world she had. Janeites will catch a glimpse of their favorite Anne Elliott Wentworth, accompanying her husband on his ship in this story. And those who wish a more extensive look at the English staying in Brussels and the famous victory will want to read Heyer’s book on that subject, An Infamous Army. There’s more Heyer romance in that book, but the battle is so well drawn that students of military history study it. It was Heyer’s personal tragedy that she was not able to leave the romance novel behind, but it was an advantage for the rest of us to be able to read her sparkling prose on what can be a very dry topic.

This is Georgette Heyer with more meat than froth. I give it four and a half Regency fans.
Georgette Heyer's sketch of Regency uniforms from one of her notebooks.

More links about the topic:
Images: Book cover, Juana Maria Smith, 1815 (from Wikimedia Commons), and Lieut. General Sir Harry Smith, from The Private World of Georgette Heyer by Jane Aiken Hodge

Monday, July 14

And the Winners Are ....

Christina and Sea Star! Please email me at janeaustensworld at gmail dot com and provide a mailing address. The first person to contact me will have first choice between Georgette Heyer's Faro's Daughter or An Infamous Army. The books have been graciously donated by SourceBooks. Our readers provided an interesting and varied summer reading list with many classics. Here it is:
  • Team of Rivals, Doris Kearns Goodwin
  • Gone With the Wind, Margaret Mitchell
  • I Capture the Castle, Dodie Smith (2 recommendations)
  • Pillars of the Earth, Ken Follett
  • World Without End, Ken Follett
  • Wuthering Heights, Emily Bronte
  • The Senator's Wife, Sue Miller
  • Change of Heart, Jodi Picoult
  • The Book Thief, Markus Zusak
  • Breath, Tim Winton.
  • A Room With a View, E.M. Forster
  • Middlemarch, George Elliot
  • War and Peace, Leo Tolstoy
  • All of Jane Austen
  • Playing the Jack, Mary Brown
  • Secrets of a Lady, Tracy Grant, and its sequel, Beneath a Silent Moon.
  • God of Small Things, Arunduti Roy
  • Rebecca, Daphne DuMaurier
  • Rachel's Holiday, Marian Keyes, and any books by her
  • Gods in Alabama, Joshilyn Jackson
  • Summer By the Sea, Susan Wiggs.
  • The Outlander series, Diana Gabaldon (2 recommendations)

Monday, June 23

False Colours: A Sparkling Heyer Regency Novel

It was past two o’clock when the job-chaise turned into Hill Street; and, as the watchman wending his way round Berkeley Square monotonously announced, a fine night. A full moon rode in the cloudless sky, dimming the street-lamps: even, as the solitary traveller had noticed, in Pall Mall, where gaslighting had replaced the oil-burners. Linkmen, carriages, and light streaming from an open door on the east side of Berkeley Square indicated that not all the members of the ton had left London; but at the end of June the Season was drawing to a close; and it did not surprise the traveller to find Hill Street deserted. It would not have surprised him if the knocker had been removed from the door of a certain house on the north side of the street, but when the chaise drew up a swift scrutiny reassured him: the Earl of Denville’s town residence had not yet been abandoned for the summer months. - Opening lines of False Colours

What do you get when you fill a book with romance, comedy, missing twin, mistaken identity, beautiful but spendthrift mother, Napoleonic history, dashing and diplomatic hero and sensible heroine? Why, Georgette Heyer's False Colours, of course.

The Honourable Christopher Kit Fancot returns to London on leave from the diplomatic service to find that his twin brother Evelyn has disappeared and his extravagant mother's debts have mounted alarmingly. The Fancot family's fortunes are riding on Evelyn s marriage to the self-possessed Cressy Stavely, and her formidable grandmother's approval of the match. If Evelyn fails to meet the Dowager Lady Stavely in a few days as planned, the betrothal could be off. When the incorrigible Lady Fancot persuades Kit to impersonate his twin (just for one night, she promises) the masquerade sets off a tangled sequence of events that engage Kit's heart far more deeply than he'd ever anticipated with his brother s fiancee who might know much more about what's going on than she cares to reveal...

In this book, one of Georgette Heyer's best loved novels, the author combines her extensive knowledge of history with her talent for spinning a witty romantic tale. Heyer's eye for detail, character development, and talent for moving a story along is masterful:

He then turned towards her companion, smiling at her, and carrying the hand she extended to him to his lips. He thought that that was probably what Evelyn, a practised flirt, would do; but even as he lightly kissed the hand he was assailed by a fresh problem: how the devil ought he to address the girl? Did Evelyn call her Cressy, or was he still on formal terms with her? He had had as yet no opportunity to take more than a brief look at her, but he had received the impression that she was a little stiff: possibly shy, certainly reserved. Not a beauty, but a goodlooking girl, gray-eyed and brown-haired, and with a shapely figure. Well enough but quite unremarkable, and not at all the sort of female likely to appeal to Evelyn. At this moment, and just as he released Miss Stavely's hand, one of the assembled company, and elderly spinster who had been observing him with avid curiosity, confided to a stout matron in the over-loud voice of the deaf: 'Very handsome! That I must own!" Startled, and far from gratified, Kit looked up, involuntarily meeting Miss Stavely's eyes. They held a look of twinkling appreciation; and he thought suddenly that she was more taking than he had at first supposed.

Georgette wrote False Colours in 1963, at a time when she was developing a relationship with a new publisher. The author seldom missed a detail. When she received the first draft for the False Colours blurb, her response was instant and decisive:

. . . and I did not say that I was especially fond of False Colours! What I may well have said was that I don't think it stinks as much as The Nonesuch. It is not my favourite - The Unknown Ajax and Venetia are the best of my later works. My style is really a mixture of Johnson and Austen - what I rely on is a certain gift for the farcical. Talk about my humour if you must talk about me at all!. . .I don't know about my historical feeling: I'd prefer a timely word about my exact detail! . . . I did warn you that I was hell-to-deal-with, didn't I?. . .I know it's useless to talk about technique in these degenerate days - but no less a technician than Noel Coward reads me because he says my technique is so good. I'm proud of that." (The Private World of Georgette Heyer, Jane Aiken Hodge, P. 152-153)

SourceBooks is rereleasing a select number of Georgette Heyer novels this season, starting with False Colours in March, and ending with Royal Escape in June (review coming soon). For sheer fun and entertainment, I highly recommend this novel and give it my highest rating of three regency fans.


Learn more about Georgette Heyer in these links:
Posted by Ms. Place