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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Wait Was Worth It
The hardcover debut of Tracy Grant is all I expected.

Her previous books, including those written with her mother, prepared me for the skilled use of historical background material. Her last three paperbacks showed me how clever her plotting could be. This historical suspense is a masterwork

Previous Grant books have been romances with the requisite happily ever...

Published on April 6, 2002 by Karen2

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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Long and dragged out...
This is Tracy Grant's 1st hardcover novel - that's why they are calling it her "debut".. Even though it's not the first book of hers that I've read, it's certainly my last, that's for sure. In Daughter of the Game, Melanie and Charles are a young, handsome, exciting couple in love. Life is a dream until their 6 year old son is kidnapped. Then shattering lies surface and...
Published on March 30, 2003


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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Wait Was Worth It, April 6, 2002
By 
Karen2 (Derry, NH United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Daughter of the Game (Hardcover)
The hardcover debut of Tracy Grant is all I expected.

Her previous books, including those written with her mother, prepared me for the skilled use of historical background material. Her last three paperbacks showed me how clever her plotting could be. This historical suspense is a masterwork

Previous Grant books have been romances with the requisite happily ever afters. While Charles and Melanie seem to have one, the initial actions in this book strip it away in such a manner that it doesn't seem it could be regained.

Over a period of three days, the couple search for a particular ring with which they can ransom their son. Grant knows her historical background and it shows. This isn't prettified London and regency England. Much of this story takes place in the layer underneath the pretty. Grant's characterization skills are also exemplary. Her characters aren't simple and the experiences that shaped them aren't easy ones. Her secondary characters are given life too and each of them had untold stories trailing behind them.

Because both Charles and Melanie played a part in the later Napoleonic Wars, flashbacks to their actions and experiences also show us the underside of war. The flashbacks are a necessary part of the story and aren't intrusive. At one point Grant's book invites comparison to Carla Kelly's stunning One Good Turn and she doesn't suffer in the comparison. Grant's characters aren't blindly patriotic. Those in the book who worked for the French cause are not portrayed as villains but as reasoning human beings.

This is a busy book.There's lots of action and movement. And in the small quiet spaces, Charles and Melanie are reacting to the death of their happily ever after and slowly working towards a new way of living with each other.

All the books Tracy Grant has written on her own and with her mother (as Anthea Malcolm and Anna Grant) are on my keeper shelves. This one will join them. At one point in this book, the family name Lescaut is used. This is a name that figures in Tracy's previous books and gives me hope that we may see more from her using this particular world.

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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Far better than I expected, December 27, 2002
By 
Rosemary Bailey Brown (United States, Serbia, Croatia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Daughter of the Game (Hardcover)
I don't think the publisher had any idea how to market this book - it's a regency but about a married couple. So it was hardly marketed at all which is a real shame. It's really great fun, dramatic, sweeping, and yes I was definitely surprised by some of the plot twists. Plus, it brought new depth to the question - if you betray the one you love, how can they ever forgive you?
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Hunting the Caravelo Ring, June 27, 2002
This review is from: Daughter of the Game (Hardcover)
Finally, an adult Regency novel! I always wondered if European life after Napoleon was defeated was really as great as most regency romance novels maintain. Tracy Grant nails that fantasy to the wall with this fast-paced thriller, wherein a married pair of ex-spies chase down a legendary ring to ransom their kidnapped son. The hero & heroine are as ghost-ridden & cynical as any LeCarre characters, & the nasty mess England left in Spain after Napoleon motivates two sets of bad guys. Interwoven with smart dialogue & a real adult love story, this is an engaging read.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Long and dragged out..., March 30, 2003
By A Customer
This is Tracy Grant's 1st hardcover novel - that's why they are calling it her "debut".. Even though it's not the first book of hers that I've read, it's certainly my last, that's for sure. In Daughter of the Game, Melanie and Charles are a young, handsome, exciting couple in love. Life is a dream until their 6 year old son is kidnapped. Then shattering lies surface and their relationship starts to unravel. This sounds great, doesn't it? Such potential! But Grant drags and drags and drags the story out until I had to skip from about pg 300 to the end (book is 483 pgs long!) I just couldn't stand it anymore. I felt like screaming - Move it ALONG!!! I wasn't crazy about either the hero or the heroine but I really loved Colin, the little boy. But most romance/adventure readers like myself cringe when children are hurt in stories and there was a very horrific part in here that turned my stomach. So, as you can tell - I was disappointed. I think I'll stick to "sweet" authors for awhile like Barbara Freethy and Pamela Morsi. I doubt I'll try another Tracy Grant.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fabulous! Deserves More than 5 Stars!, May 15, 2002
This review is from: Daughter of the Game (Hardcover)
Charles and Mélanie Fraser have life many of their friends envy -- a close, loving relationship, two beautiful children, and a large home in London's Berkeley Square full of devoted servants. Charles, a member of Parliament, the grandson of a duke and a former intelligence officer adores his wife Mélanie who he met while in France during the Napoleonic Wars eight years earlier.

Sadly their idyllic life is about to take a tumble when their six year old son Colin is kidnapped and held for ransom. The man behind the kidnapping seems to believe Charles has the legendary Carevalo Ring in his possession. He wishes it returned to him before he will release young Colin. Charles and Mélanie waste no time in trying to find the ring so that their son will be returned. Thus starts an exciting search through the streets of London -- including the most elaborate estates, a debtors prison, and the seediest taverns, brothels, and gaming halls as well as a trip to Brighton. As Charles and Mélanie continue their search shocking secrets are revealed which leads one to wonder if any of their lives can ever be the same.

Rich and multi-layered, this story is full of startling revelations that will have the reader gasping out loud. The twists and turns nearly give the reader whiplash!! Liberally spiced with bits of history, DAUGHTER OF THE GAME is one of the best books I've read all year. The author is a graduate of Stanford where she studied British history and her knowledge of the history of early 19th Century Britain adds depth and texture to a fabulous read that I dare anyone to put down once they've started. This book is one to cherish and successfully cross genres so appealing to historical readers, historical romance readers, and mystery readers as well. DAUGHTER OF THE GAME is a keeper in every sense of the word.

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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars promising beginning, April 22, 2002
By 
M. S. Butch (Katonah, New York USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Daughter of the Game (Hardcover)
i agree with some of the previous reviewers' praise, and some criticisms. Certainly this book is way far above the standard paperback romance. I also agree with the reviewer that found characterizations somewhat shallow. I enjoyed the plot, the book was fast paced; it did not seem really predictable as i was going along. on the other hand, the legendary ring is not very convincing as a subject for all of the action, and the plot was perhaps a bit too coincidental. Nvertherless I would recommend the book, and will look forward to the author's future efforts.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Suspenseful Historical Mystery, July 1, 2002
By 
Sheri Melnick (Enola, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Daughter of the Game (Hardcover)
Ms. Grant's extensive knowledge of the regency period pays off in this mystery/spy novel with a touch of romance. In the year 1819, Melanie and Charles Fraser return to their London home after a party to learn that their six-year-old son, Colin, has been taken. The Frasers have only days to locate the legendary Carevalo Ring, known for the power it gives the bearer. The Marques de Carevalo will stop at nothing to get the ring back into his family's clutches and believes that it will enable him to seize power from the current Spanish government.

But a mission gone awry seven years prior left Charles' military operation without the ring, and he and Melanie must employ their previous knowledge of espionage to locate the missing jewel before time runs out for Colin. To do so, long hidden secrets about their respective pasts must come to light thereby threatening the very force of their marriage. Traveling from crowded gaming halls to bawdy brothels and picturesque Brighton, the pair's endurance is tested as they refuse to give up until the ring is found.

Though the read appears slow moving initially, it quickly picks up pace as the players journey to find the next clue to locate the ring. Interspersed is a surprisingly candid interplay between Melanie and Charles as they reveal events of their past long since buried. The depictions of events and places are descriptive enough to pull the reader into the novel without overshadowing the captivating suspense that is the mainstay of this read. A true original, this is one read not to miss.

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Compelling Good Read!, March 15, 2003
By 
DruidsLegion "druidslegion" (Lansdowne, PA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Daughter of the Game (Hardcover)
The first sentence ("It was the sort of night that cloaks a multitude of sins.") may be infelicitous, in the "It was a dark and stormy night" tradition. But it WAS that sort of night, and we're transported into that world of sins and darkness. While this book seems to be lumped together with Romance Novels (yuck!), it's actually more a mystery-thriller in the Caleb Carr mode.

Charles and Melanie Fraser are fully-realized characters, subtle and complex. Their actions, revelations, and reactions are convincing and true-to-life within the framework of the plot. While some of the dramatic twists may be predictable, as mentioned in the Editorial Reviews, they are still attention-grabbing and necessary to propel the action. And the action never stops! We're treated to introspection AND adventure, precisely blended, in appetizing helpings. The pace is rapid. Grant has a good touch with flash-back and fast-forward, and with switching from one character to another without being jarring or tedious.

It's not Dickens or Thackeray, but it's not a read-by-number Romance, either. Think of it as a well-told tale that you don't have to write a Theme about!

In sum, I found this a thoroughly meaty Good Read; Melanie, Charles and their children and connections are depicted with such skill that the reader cares about them and what happens to them. I plan to get the second book very soon, and hope I will once more sink my teeth into a satisfyingly guiltless Guilty Pleasure.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Exciting historical fiction, March 30, 2002
This review is from: Daughter of the Game (Hardcover)
In 1819 London, a Spaniard abducts Colin, the son of aristocratic Melanie and Charles Fraser. The obvious motives are either ransom as Charles is a well to do grandson of a duke or political reasons because he is a parliamentary reformist. However, they learn that the lead kidnapper wants neither. Instead he believes that Charles and Melanie from their recent activities on the Peninsular against Napoleon know the location of the Carevalo Ring, an item supposedly containing power to protect its bearer while its symbolism will gain supporters.

The Frasers' search for their son leads them to actress Helen Trevennen. However, she seems to be one step ahead of her pursuers. As they give chase, Charles is stunned to learn that Melanie was a French spy even while he the same exact job for the English. As he struggles to accept her revelation, he knows he must concentrate on the task to rescue Colin, an innocent pawn in this cold game.

Though the twists and turns seem somewhat obvious, the charm of THE DAUGHTER OF THE GAME is the clever way Tracy Grant enables the reader to see the same event through varying perspectives. Relativity depends on one's background and current position. The characters are a delightful group especially the Frasers recoiling from one shock after another yet like the bunny keep on ticking because the goal is the life of their son. The support cast adds depth to the chase, but mostly provides a different viewpoint and a feel for the immediate post Napoleonic decade. Ms. Grant takes the historical fiction fans to enjoyable levels with this wonderful entry.

Harriet Klausner

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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Can you say P R E T E N T I O US?, May 13, 2005
The opening line says it all, and believe me, it doesn't improve. If you like romance, it's not romantic unless you like your heroines without one ounce of honor and heroes who love to be used and abused. If it's a mystery you're looking for, you figure out what's up around page 50, although I admit to not having a sick enough mind to figure out the relationship amongst the hero, heroine and the "father".

The author turns philosophy and religion into trite, pompous pronouncements; she stands history on its head and has her characters racing around England as if they owned their own personal bullet train. The characters don't eat, don't sleep, and are about as angsty as any I've met since "The Breakfast Club." And the first review above is correct: the writing is clunky.

As with a couple of other reviewers, I gave it one star because I couldn't give it zero.
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Daughter of the Game by Tracy Grant (Hardcover - April 1, 2002)
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