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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Sensually Stimulating and Rich Historical,
By
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This review is from: The Bookseller's Daughter (Paperback)
Setting - France 1783 (six years before the French Revolution) We are originally introduced to Marie-Laure as a scullery maid ordered to serve tea to the aristocratic family she was working for. She is nervous enough but more so when she recognizes the younger son, Viscount Joseph d'Auvers-Raimond as the wounded book smuggler of outlawed and banned books that she and her brother had cared for one night, only to have had him disappear the next day. During that short time they cared for him, she became aware of him as a man and he, mostly in an unconscious state, inspired in her an awakening response that was so passionate in nature that she knew that the betrothal to a friend of her brothers could never be. Consequently, after the death of her father and no marriage in the offing, she was reduced to earning her way. Unfortunately, for a beautiful young woman, this involved fighting off unwanted advances from both servants and aristocrats. Joseph recognized Marie-Laure, and was determined to do something to save her from the advances he knew his father and brother would be making and planned that he would save her by staging a tryst before they got to her. As embarrassing as the public tryst was, Marie-Laure agreed to playing the part of his mistress as they innocently spent their evenings in discussions of literature. Soon, though they each began thinking of more enticing ways to spend the time as they fell in love and after Marie-Laures innocent but provocative seduction of Joseph the nights were most definitely spent in more than discussions. But as all romances go between aristocrats and servants, jealousies and hatreds would tear the two lovers apart as betrayals abound and a murder mystery needed to be solved.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful and erotic...,
This review is from: The Bookseller's Daughter (Paperback)
I've had this book on my to-read pile for almost a year and finally decided to give it a whirl. The Bookseller's Daughter sucked me in and didn't let go until its final page. This is the story of Marie-Laure Vernet, a young, passionate, bookish daughter of a bookshop owner who has a strong, profound connection with a book smuggler who turns out to be an aristocrat. She tends to his wounded leg when he enters her shop and meets him again after her father dies, loses the bookshop and is forced to work as a maid for an aristocratic family. The attraction is undeniable and Viscomte Joseph d'Auvers-Raimond decides to take her into his room every night and pass her off as his mistress so as to protect her from his father and brother, who cannot resist a pretty maid. At first, their nights together are nothing more than intellectual discussions about literature, politics and Joseph regaling Marie-Laure with tales of his adventures as a roguish libertine. But then their nights become passionate ones of sensual, erotic sex and development of loving feelings for one another. However, things soon get in the way -- marriage, aristocratic titles, murder and revenge being just a few of their many obstacles. There are various twists throughout the novel.
I agree with the reviewers that say that Marie-Laure and Joseph spend most of the novel apart. I did not mind that bit because it gave the story and its main characters seem like star-crossed lovers, which is refreshing in a romance novel. After all, we all more or less know that the protagonists will end up together, why not add a different flavor? I loved their love letters -- Joseph's erotic ones as well as Marie-Laure's intimate and loving ones. The letters were indeed romantic. As for the sex scenes, I thought they were very well written and scrumptiously erotic. The reviewer who said that the sex scenes were vulgar, trashy and full of F words must have read a different book. Then again, perhaps I am so used to reading books in which the authors don't bother to sugarcoat their sex scenes with G-rated euphemisms and instead choose a more uninhibited, bolder approach to erotic romance that the scenes in this book seem incredibly mild in comparison. The scenes are sensual, erotic and smoldering at times. The protagonists are great and Rosenthal did a wonderful job differentiating the commoners from the aristocrats and their friction during those times. The backdrop of France before the French Revolution was also great. However, there are some blatant anachronisms in this novel that were difficult to overlook. And the dialogue in the story sounded too modern at times, a common problem with historical romances. All in all, The Bookseller's Daughter is a curl-up-under-the-covers book that you'll want to give a whirl. I recommend it most highly...
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
mediocre,
By
This review is from: The Bookseller's Daughter (Paperback)
While I enjoyed this book, I found it clumsy at times. In the first half, the two main characters have very little interaction with each other on-screen, which sometimes made it feel like nothing was really happening. Also, the story had a common problem of historical romances in which the characters are thoroughly (almost stereotypically) modern and don't fit their historical context. Both heroine and her love interest seemed a bit too uptight to be true, in their own ways (not sexually, though, the sex was all right). There were some small but jarring anachronisms in the setting, too. Otherwise, it was kind of a fun book.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
An average read,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Bookseller's Daughter (Paperback)
I liked the setting of the book and Joseph was a refreshingly diffrent hero. I however had problems with Marie Laure's characterisation and her quest for freedom and independence towards the end.I also dont like novels where the hero and heroine are separated for a long period of time, and in this book they did not have any scenes together for almost a hundred pages in between! Hence the three stars.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
heated historical romance,
This review is from: The Bookseller's Daughter (Paperback)
In 1793, Marie-Laurie Vernet works as a scullery maid, but probably spends a good portion of her time dexterously fending off the unwanted advances of the aristocracy without offending any of these males who could easily destroy her. Marie-Laurie is probably better at eluding the men than she is at serving tea. Her only exception happens to be book smuggler Viscount Joseph d'Auvers-Raimond whom she met when he became ill in her late father's bookstore.Joseph shares Marie-Laurie's passion for books and has gone so far as to draft an erotic tale that stars the woman who haunts his dreams, Marie-Laurie. When Joseph learns that his odious father has chosen Marie-Laurie to warm his bed, he makes her his mistress to keep her safe. Instead of sex, they discuss books and soon they fall in love. However, anything beyond being his mistress is forbidden for this duo and betrayal looms on the horizon. Historical romance readers will appreciate this heated historical romance that occurs in France on the eve of the Revolution. The story line provides insight into what is happening in the last decade before Madam Guillotine began running the country. Being passionate for more than just each other as the lead couple is bibliophiles adds layers to their personalities. Though key secondary players like his sire seem to vile, readers will enjoy Pam Rosenthal's delightful THE BOOKSELLER'S DAUGHTER. Harriet Klausner
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fun to read,
By California Reader (San Jose, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Bookseller's Daughter (Paperback)
I enjoyed reading this book, as I have with the other 2 books the author has written. There were some challenges in tying together a few pieces of the book, and I stretched to make some storylines work. However, I really enjoyed the personalities of Marie-Laure and Joseph, and their love did prevail through very trying circumstances. I also felt that the author's style of writing and the flashbacks were interesting to read and kept the book flowing.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Engrossing, couldn't put it down!,
By
This review is from: The Bookseller's Daughter (Paperback)
I didn't have high hopes for this book but I couldn't put it down! A great read, with nice historical details thrown in.
5 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Creative and originial,
By Monica Wanat "ua1vm" (Chicago, IL USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Bookseller's Daughter (Paperback)
I really liked this story about Marie-Laure and Joseph. Joseph is the second son of a duc and, due to past scandal, is at the monetary mercy of his family. Marie Laure works for his family, but is pretty enough to have gained the attention of Joseph's father and brother. In order to protect Marie-Laure, as she once saved his life, Joseph pretends to have already claimed her 'personal services.'This is an original story because it is about two people who have to deal with the whims of fate. Although he is an aristocrat, he isn't powerful enough to save himself, but he does his best to save Marie-Laure. Marie-Laure may be powerless against some of the things fate has thrown at her, but she isn't a doormat. Overall, this was a passionate, compelling story without some of the convetions overused by some romance authors.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
A Bit Ridiculous and Cliché,
By Barb Mechalke (in the lovely Finger Lakes Region of Upstate New York) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: The Bookseller's Daughter (Paperback)
I was sorely disappointed...I'm not sure what I expected...something believable perhaps. Unfortunately this novel reads like a sexually explicit episode of The Young and the Restless.
The characters are flat, the clichés are many and the murder mystery portion of the novel seems like a complete after thought. I have to admit that Rosenthal did a nice job with the backdrop, France 1783-1789. But this story was overly focused on the explicit sex scenes between the main characters and falls flat with nearly every other aspect of the storytelling.
7 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Yuck,
By
This review is from: The Bookseller's Daughter (Paperback)
I read her first book *Almost a Gentleman* and liked it..The story was fun and different, but as soon as the sex comes into the book, it just goes downhill for me. This book was exactly the same way. Pam Rosenthal is gifted; I just do not know why her books become so nasty, and sexual.. and unromantic.. half way through them. This is truly, what people call a trashy romance. I just do not like them. I love sex in my books, but when it gets so descriptive and the words become porn and not romantic. It just turns me off. I threw this away in the trash half way in the book. I do love the exotic, and Pam Rosenthal is truly exotic. I just do not like trashy. Take the F words out and every position known to have sex in and there is no story anymore. It starts out wonderful and just come to a complete halt.. When the sex starts. |
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The Bookseller's Daughter by Pam Rosenthal (Paperback - January 1, 2004)
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