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27 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An interesting writing exercise from a good craftsman, August 17, 2004
I heard about this book years ago. Cornwell mentioned on a fan website that he once wrote a romance novel under the pen name Susannah Kells to win a bet made over some Jameson with his mates when he was a journalist in Northern Ireland.
I located a copy and found it a most credible example of the genre.
It has all the proper elements of a historical romance, a heroine who feels alienated from her family, forbidden romance, the presence of titled families, physical danger, secret pasts and great fortunes plus a few unique twists of its own. Romance novelists usually don't write about how the point beats the edge in a sword fight.
The original liner notes said that the author, like the heroine, was raised among members of a very strict religious sect that she rebelled against as an adult. That is true, as Cornwell himself was adopted shortly after birth into an offshoot of 18th century Methodism that called themselves the Peculiar people. As I read A Crowning Mercy, I got the distinct impression this was a more personal books than the author's other works. For that reason alone it is a must read for the true Cornwell fan.
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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A wonderful combination of historic detail and romance., October 6, 1999
Fleeing from her strict Puritan household and an odious arranged marriage, a young woman seeks her fortune in 17th century London and falls in love with a charming aristocrat. As the fragile peace between the Puritan Roundheads and Royalist aristocracy crumbles, however, it becomes apparent that this young woman is not at all what she seems.
Beautifully written, this novel set during the English Civil War has everything: a heroine with a mysterious past, an engaging hero, an intricate plot, and some truly loathsome villains.
Its companion novel, "The Fallen Angels," is every bit as good.
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Archetypal Cornwell, June 21, 2005
Cornwell manages to integrate history into the web of his fiction in very managed, intricate stages. The isolation of the Oxford Regency cast against the fanatical characters of Puritan England and civil war is a marvelous painting; Lady Margaret Lazender, Samuel Scammell, Faithful Unto Death Hervey and Vavasour Devorax are all characters who come alive (or dead, as the case may be) in credible ways. A delightful dose of fictionalized history, however, I found the water scenes too biblical and forced in allusion as the character of Dorcas was "reborn" in the novel. As with all other Cornwell, very graphic descriptions of the fetid side of imprisonment and torture befitting the seventeenth century.
I will continue to read and purchase this writer as his insight within specific historic periods is a continuing delight to me.
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