Book Review Club Reading Surprise: The Midnight Rose by Lucinda Riley

In April, the theme for my monthly readers group was Reading Surprise or Zen Reading. The idea is to pick up a book without having any idea what it’s about. This means an author you’ve never read before and no peeking at the book jacket or last page.

Now this isn’t my favorite theme. Since I buy most of the books I read, I screen them carefully in hopes of picking something I will actually enjoy. I tried several free downloads from the library website before stumbling across a book with an intriguing title through the Kindle Daily Deal. I figured it was worth a $1.99 gamble, so I bought it and what a good choice it turned out to be!

The Midnight Rose: A NovelMidnight Rose cover
by Lucinda Riley

Riley’s novel is one of my favorite kinds of books, the story within a story.

It starts out with Anahita Chavan, an elderly woman celebrating her 100th birthday. She had two children, a boy and a girl, but her son went missing in England when he was only about 3 and she was given his death certificate. However, her psychic abilities tell her he was still alive and she never gave up on finding out what happened to him. She has written a memoir about her life and what happened to separate her from her son.. She decides to give the manuscript to her grandson Ari. After she dies, Ari’s life falls apart and he reads the manuscript on an airplane to London and starts trying to find out more.

In the meantime we meet Rebecca Bradley, an American actress filming a movie set in the 1920’s at Astbury Manor in England. Rebecca bears a startling resemblance to Lady Violet Astbury, grandmother of the current lord. Rebecca feels a connection to Violet and the manor that is never fully explained (except maybe by reincarnation). Things get complicated when Ari shows up asking questions about Anni’s son.

The book moves back and forth from present to Anni’s story of her life and travels between India and England. Her story is the centerpiece of the book, but the contemporary story lines are interesting also. Anni was a remarkable woman who lived in interesting times. The title comes from the name of a deep red rose.

It’s a long, complicated and at times tragic tale, well-written, often lyrical. I enjoyed the glimpse into high-caste Indian life and the soap opera-style drama around Astbury Park. (Fans of Downton Abbey should enjoy this book a lot.) I got the audio book for a few more dollars. The narration by Anjana Srinivasan is excellent. I expect I will read more books by this author.

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Linda

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@Barrie Summy

Book Review Club: Romancing the Duke by Tessa Dare

Romancing the Duke coverRomancing the Duke
(Castles Ever After)
by Tessa Dare
Regency Romance

(Disclaimer: Tessa Dare is a personal friend from my local writers group, however I bought the book and read it of my own volition.)

Tessa’s book has two of the most unique characters and plot I’ve read in a while, and it’s a variant of the Beauty and the Beast theme. The twist is that the heroine is not actually a beauty, but the “beast” is nearly blind and just assumes she’s a beauty. (He can see a mass of dark hair and a shapely body and that’s enough for him.)

Miss Isolde Ophelia Goodnight is an impoverished spinster of 26 whose father was a well-known author of a series of romantic stories set in the fictional world of Moranglia. Her fortunes appear to change when her godfather wills her a castle of her very own. She travels there with high hopes only to find the castle a ruin inhabited by a bad-tempered man who tells her he is the Duke of Rothbury and the castle belongs to him.

Ransom, the duke, is an embittered man who was left scarred and blind after a duel with the man who stole his fiancee. He has hidden himself in the decrepit Gostley Castle* with just his valet for company, not counting the pesky vicar’s daughter who insists on bringing him baskets of treats. The last thing he wants is a young woman in his castle unless she’s there to warm his bed. He also knows that he hasn’t sold the castle so it can’t possibly be hers.

Kenilworth Castle

Kenilworth Castle via Bigstock license Copyright: siavramova

* In one of my favorite lines, a secondary character asks if the name of the castle is pronounced Ghostly or Ghastly, as either one applies.

The duke hasn’t read any of the correspondence piled on a table, and Izzy agrees to be his private secretary and sort through the mail to find out what has happened. As she goes through it, both realize his solicitors, and possibly his heir, have been stealing from him.

The two have a prickly relationship, filled with equal parts squabbling and sexual tension. Ransom persists in mispronouncing Moranglia and making fun of Izzy’s belief in romance and true love. But she’s the one who stands by him when his solicitors turn up with a doctor, determined to declare him incompetent so his heir can seize his title and estate.

The book is both touching and humorous, and I heartily recommend it.

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Linda

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@Barrie Summy