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Educating Caroline (Sonnet Books)
 
 
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Educating Caroline (Sonnet Books) [Mass Market Paperback]

Patricia Cabot (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (33 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Sonnet Books October 30, 2001

Lady Caroline Linford is horrified to discover...

her fiancé, the Marquis of Winchilsea, in the arms of another woman. Unfortunately, Victorian society considers such masculine peccadilloes a trifle; canceling their imminent wedding would be unthinkable. But Caroline's wish is for the man she is to marry to desire only her...and she seeks lessons in the art of romance from the best teacher: London's most notorious rake.

Braden Granville may be a famous lover...

but he has no intention of taking part in Caroline's scheme -- until he learns she has something he wants: the name of his own unfaithful fiancee's lover. As their passionate tutelage begins, sparks fly -- and the lines between teacher and student fall away. Now there is just one last lesson to learn: on the subject of true love, the heart chooses its own unpredictable ways.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Brimming with the warmth and charm of a playful puppy, Cabot's (Lady of Skye, etc.) Victorian-era romance turns the tired theme of a young woman's sexual awakening into something fresh, funny and sensual. Never prurient, this spirited romp offers seduction scenes that are scintillating yet subdued and protagonists with whom the reader can easily identify. When Lady Caroline Linford finds her fianc‚, Hurst Slater, the Marquis of Winchilsea, in flagrante delicto with Lady Jacquelyn Seldon, she does what any sensible woman of her era would do nothing. Caroline even goes out of her way to keep Jacquelyn's fianc‚, wealthy firearms manufacturer Braden Granville, from discovering the pair. Nevertheless, Braden, who worked his way out of London's worst crime-ridden ghetto only to be reviled by society's elite, knows he's being cuckolded, and he's determined to discover the identity of Jacquelyn's lover so that he can call off their wedding. Caroline, however, feels obliged to marry Hurst since he saved her brother's life a year earlier. To make him love her, Caroline resolves to become an expert in lovemaking, and she turns to Braden, the Lothario of London, for instruction. A subplot involving a vicious ring of card sharks helps flesh out Caroline and Braden's romance, and supporting characters such as Caroline's friend Emily, a Suffragette who's fond of chaining herself to things, and Braden's quirky cronies Weasel, Wormy and Crutch add zing to an already intoxicating tale. (Nov.)Forecast: Cabot (aka Meg Cabot and Jenny Carroll) is a writer of remarkable skill, and it's only a matter of time before her historical romances are embraced as readily as her young adult titles (The Princess Diaries; The Mediator). Strong word of mouth and glowing reviews should help propel her latest into the limelight.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Review

Romantic Times Warmhearted passion and love-struck laughter light up this dazzling novel from Patricia Cabot, "one of the genre's rising stars. -- Review

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 439 pages
  • Publisher: Pocket (October 30, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743410262
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743410267
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.2 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (33 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,212,653 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

33 Reviews
5 star:
 (25)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (33 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful! Delightful! Witty! Jane Austen with sex!, September 23, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Educating Caroline (Sonnet Books) (Mass Market Paperback)
What a terrific book! I'd never read Ms Cabot before, but this book is certainly a great incentive to investigate her other books. I simply adored it. And eventhough it's a fairly long book for a romance at 400+ pages, it sure doesn't feel like it and I didn't want it to end! But if you're expecting the typical first hot kiss by page 100; sex by page 150 you may be too impatient for this book. You just need to go along for the ride on this one - and an ejoyable ride it is!

I won't go too much into the plot since the book description above tells you what you need to know. But I will say that intially I was worried that the "heroine asks lothario to teach her about seduction" plot would be really hackneyed. But to my very pleasant surprise, it was well played, witty, sexy and just plain fun. I'm smiling now just remembering the first "lesson"! Both Caroline and Braden learned a little something that day!

Braden Granville, nouveau riche gunsmith who worked his way out of the Seven Dials slums and Lady Caroline Linford, daughter of the Earl of Bartlett, have more in common than one would think. For Caroline's father was the first Earl of Bartlett and was, like Braden, a self-made man. Though the rest of Society looks down their noses at him (including his gold-digging fiancee) Caroline doesn't - party because of her father and partly because it simply is not in her nature. She is genuine, sympathetic, warm and kind. She's also fiery and passionate when it comes to causes near and dear to her heart (fools and animals!). She's nothing like the other Society women Braden has romanced and she throws him off balance with her logic, her lack of artifice. He finds himself using the flimsiest of excuses to seek her out and though she knows she should run from him, she finds she doesn't want to!

I just loved this story, these characters. Well written, fast paced, sparkling and witty dialog all combine to a book I highly recommend!

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A triumph we all can enjoy, January 31, 2002
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Educating Caroline (Sonnet Books) (Mass Market Paperback)
The Irish novelist, the late Frank O'Connor, once observed that the secret of writing novels was revealed only to Jane Austen and Turgenev; that when they died, this secret died with them. Too bad O'Connor never got to read Patricia Cabot.

Not long ago I completed "Educating Caroline" and, as a result, some of my long-held stereotypes (almost exclusively negative) about "romance novels" now lie, so to speak, in a shambles at my feet. Or do they? I can't decide. We have to put a tag on every book, stick it in some pigeon-hole, assign it to a genre. And I suppose "romance" was the inevitable category for "Caroline." But this novel isn't only a "romance."

In fact, you don't have to like romance novels to thoroughly enjoy "Educating Caroline." It is outrageously witty and occasionally naughty, with a complex (not to say audacious) plot and interesting, believable, finely-drawn characters. And of course it has a heroine to die for: the eponymous Caroline (yeah, I'm male) -- sweet, lovely, regularly non-linear in her sentiments and activities, and just courageous and resourceful enough to keep a most dangerous situation for getting entirely out of hand. And the interesting hero, while no push-over, escapes the cliché of being primarily an aristocratic man-toy: tall, dark, brooding, and impossibly handsome (and titled) -- much to the author's credit. (Her villians, by the way, are deliciously corrupt and degenerate.)

Since completing "Caroline," I've acquired and read two earlier novels by Cabot. Both make for good, amusing, even compelling entertainment. But neither lit the fire of this reader the way "Caroline" did. It's my opinion that, in Ms. Cabot's most recent novel, she has cast off some of the mass-market constraints she might once have felt compelled to observe with care. In doing so, she has now given us an exquisitely crafted novel of broad, general interest. And I am not easy to please: my novelists of choice are Henry James and (of course) the inimitable Miss Austen.

It's true that "Educating Caroline" will not make us forget "The Wings of the Dove" or "Pride and Prejudice." And yet, on the basis of "Caroline," one might almost conclude that Patricia Cabot is a sort of latter-day Austen-meets-Nabokov. I'll be carefully watching Ms. Cabot's web site for future developments. Stranger things have happened ... .

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Could have been better, February 24, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Educating Caroline (Sonnet Books) (Mass Market Paperback)
Upon discovering her fiance in a compromising position with another woman, Caroline Linford decides not to dump him, not to get even, but to enthrall him with her womanly wiles and keep him from straying ever again. Sadly, she doesn't have any such wiles, and decides that the perfect person to teach her some is her fiance's lover's fiance, Braden Granville, a legendary Lothario. All Braden wants is the name of his fiance's lover, so he can break his engagement without being sued for breach of promise. Naturally, a bargain is arranged between the slighted parties.

The main problem with this book is that there aren't enough likeable people. The hero, Braden, is excellent, and Caroline's brother, Thomas, and friend, Emily, are good, but every other significant character is hard, if not impossible, to like. Caroline's mother, barely thirty pages into the book, tells her daughter that while her own marriage was a faithful, loving marriage, Caroline shouldn't really expect anything similar, and ought to keep her mouth closed about her husband's affairs! While a certain amount of villainy and even cruelty can enhance a book, in this case it really just made me want to skip those pages that dealt with all the hateful characters. The heroine isn't UNlikeable, but she's just too naive and (a bit) self-centered to be really likeable. Only in her interactions with the (few) other sympathetic characters does she shine.

There are a few other odd things about this book; Caroline and Braden have no trouble meeting each other anytime they want, and often in complete privacy, which seems strange for an unmarried Victorian earl's daughter. Also, there's a "you lied to me, how can I trust you enough to marry you" plot device at the end which really served no purpose except to make Caroline look spineless (after all, everyone else in the book has lied to her and she hasn't lost any affection for them, but when she ASSUMES Braden has done so, she walks out on him without a second's pause). But Cabot is a good writer, and her prose carries some of the weaker moments. She's written much better heroines, though, and tighter plots, like Lady of Skye. I'll keep my fingers crossed for her next book, but Educating Caroline is not a keeper.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
There was no light in the room other than that given off by the flames in the ornate marble fireplace. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
scarred eyebrow, bearing reins, new marquis, promise suit
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Braden Granville, Lady Caroline, Lady Jacquelyn, Lady Bartlett, Caroline Linford, Dame Ashforth, Marquis of Winchilsea, Lothario of London, Good Lord, Lady Emily, Hurst Slater, Lord Winchilsea, Sylvester Granville, Prince of Wales, Jackie Seldon, Seven Dials, Duke of Childes, Bond Street, Good God, Lord Woodson, Old Bailey, Sir Roger, Dead Eye, Lord Bartlett, Seymour Hawkins
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