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A Lady's Guide to Improper Behavior [Mass Market Paperback]

Suzanne Enoch (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)

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Mass Market Paperback, April 27, 2010 $7.99  

Book Description

April 27, 2010

The Rules:

A lady should always make polite conversation . . .

Theresa Weller understands the rules of decorum, and is appalled when Colonel Bartholomew James disrupts a perfectly civilized dinner. This rude, insensitive man is the complete opposite of everything a gentleman should be—but with one searing kiss, Tess can think of no one else.

A lady should never lose her temper . . .

Aggravated beyond bearing by a man who speaks his mind, Tess wishes there was a guide to men like Bartholomew. Surely, with such an assortment of handsome, polite suitors to choose from, Tess should not ache for him.

And a lady should never pursue a gentleman.

She invites him on carriage rides and dares him to dance, and almost makes him want to return to Society. Bartholomew knows Tess wants to be seen as a proper miss, but deep down, he knows she is precisely the sort to spark his desire . . . A most improper lady.


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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Colonel Bartholomew “Tolly” James has come home from India a broken man. Physically crippled by the notorious Thugees, Tolly also bears the guilt of being the sole survivor of the massacre that took the lives of those under his command. By turns rude and sullen, Tolly has alienated himself from proper society. Theresa Weller sees something in Tolly that others fail to perceive. Yes, he's insufferable, yet somehow she's attracted to him. Powerful men with interests in Indian trade begin to slander Tolly, labeling him a coward who deserted his men, and calling the Thugees a fabrication Tolly used to protect his reputation. With her carefully drawn characters and plot chock-full of political intrigue, greed, and scandal, Enoch has put a nifty Regency spin on the Beauty and the Beast story. This exciting tale of a hero wronged in his own land, only to find salvation through the true love and steadfast faith of his soulmate will appeal to fans of Candace Camp and Virginia Henley. --Shelley Mosley

About the Author

A native and current resident of Southern California, Suzanne Enoch loves movies almost as much as she loves books. She once appeared on an E! special, Star Wars Is Back, as an expert on the romance in the Star Wars movies. Other highlights include winning her third grade spelling bee, receiving an E.T. poster and T-shirt in an alien-inspired poetry contest, and submitting a script for The A-Team (which was not why the series was cancelled). When she is not busily working on her next novel, Suzanne likes to contemplate interesting phenomena, like how the three guppies in her aquarium became 161 guppies in five months.


Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Avon; Original edition (April 27, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0061662216
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061662218
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.1 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #392,856 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

A lifelong lover of books, Suzanne Enoch has been writing them since she learned to read. She is the author of two well-received Avon Regencies, The Black Duke's Prize and Angel's Devil, and five Avon Romances: Lady Rogue, Stolen Kisses, By Love Undone, Taming Rafe and Reforming a Rake. Born and raised in Southern California, Suzanne lives a few scant miles from Disneyland with her collection of Star Wars action figures and a Cairn terrier named Katie (after the heroine of her first Regency). She's still looking for her own hero, and hopes he will be handsome, titled, and just a little wicked. Meanwhile, she's currently at work inventing him in her next historical romance.

 

Customer Reviews

23 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:
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2 star:
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Average Customer Review
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Another solid Enoch romance, May 10, 2010
By 
Buried By Books (CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Lady's Guide to Improper Behavior (Mass Market Paperback)
It's not often that I am both entranced and repulsed by a heroine in a romance novel. Usually I either love them or hate them. Theresa (Tess) Weller is a heroine that I think might rub some readers the wrong way, but a character I both loved and wanted to smack upside the head.

Our hero, Colonel Bartholomew (Tolly) James is much more evenly appealing. The book opens with him--wounded quite badly and the sole survivor of a massacre-- hiding out in the Adventurers' Club, away from the sympathy and pity of his family. His family's persistent requests for his presence, though, force him back home where he encounters Tess Weller at a dinner party. Despite being rude and provoking a mild argument, he seems to capture the attention of Tess--someone who is never rude, always proper, and is somewhat obsessed with remaining a paragon of unexceptional behavior.



The budding relationship between the two seems to confuse both of them. I found it very sweet that neither character was 'in pursuit.' There is no chase. Which seems appropriate since our heroine is very conscious of propriety and our hero is in a wheel chair or using a cane throughout most of the story. The romance is low key. No big dramatic betrayals. I found that kind of slow build refreshing.

Why did I want to slap Tess, you ask? Because she lacks backbone at a crucial moment. She can assist with a surgery and shave a man in his bedchamber, but she refuses to support Tolly when he needs it because it would harm her reputation. It sounds shallow--it is shallow--but Tess is obsessed with propriety for a reason. And she is aware of how cowardly she is being. Disgusted by it. But, for a time, she remains paralyzed by her fear of stepping outside the carefully constructed box of good behavior in which she's surrounded herself. What I found redeeming was that she wasn't really as shallow as most of society thought her to be. She was aware of her fear. Aware that she was failing a friend at a crucial moment. And ultimately, finally, shows some backbone by casting aside the rules she's governed her life by for a decade.

The mention of the Thuggee problems in India during British colonialism was something I hadn't seen a lot of in standard Avon historicals. I found it interesting that while there is some lingering PTSD issues with Col. James, the major emotional scars come from the destruction of his ability to trust. And the scenes with Tess helping him shave were more emotional than the love scenes--which, I admit, were fairly tame and not very imaginative.

Something only an Enoch fangirl would love: the brief mention of Bradshaw Carroway. I'm hoping this means that she's going to finally give us those books featuring the rest of Dare's family. (Originally seen in the Rake.)

One thing that I almost missed: the switch to 2nd edition excerpts at the chapter headings. I'm guilty of skimming most chapter headings, even amusing ones, but thankfully noticed this change and flipped back a couple of chapters to read the headings with the 2nd edition difference in my head.

Overall, I thought this was much better than the previous book featuring the Adventurers' Club, the Care and Taming of a Rogue. And while it did have some thematic echoes of London's Perfect Hero, those similarities were very superficial. Pretty much, just the wounded war vet angle and the fact that the War Office and Horse Guards seemed to be part of the conflict and interfering in a happily ever after.

The resolution of the 'threat' against Col. James seemed a bit rushed and superficial. As if an editor was a little too stingy on the page count. The necessary elements were there, but I would have liked to have the 'danger' element expanded on more just a bit. And I would have liked to see at least a portion of Tolly's editorial.

I found this book unexpectedly moving. Not quite as good as the Lessons in Love trilogy, but then few books are. And I'm still crossing my fingers that Bradshaw's reappearance means that we'll get more stories featuring the Carroways soon.
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18 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Adventurers' Club # 2. How many will there be?, April 27, 2010
This review is from: A Lady's Guide to Improper Behavior (Mass Market Paperback)
Heroine Theresa Weller is beautiful, pleasant and proper. A traumatic event at age 10 has taught her to control her emotions and conduct herself properly at all times. Hero Colonel Tolly James has had a horrifically violent event in India change him from a pleasant, easy-going, caring young man to a bitter, rude, ungentlemanly and physically-damaged one. They meet, a romance develops and they heal each other, she learning to show more of her emotions and to be herself, and he learning to feel and love life again. And we have some mystery and intrigue involving deliberate misinformation about what really happened to our hero in India. (Think big corporation machinations. In this case, the East India Company.)

Suzanne Enoch is a good-enough writer that the story is relatively interesting and the romance element is romantic and developed better than in her previous Adventurers' Club novel (THE CARE AND TAMING OF A ROGUE). So the book is OK, just not very special. Too many emotionally- and/or physically-damaged heroes have come and gone in the hundreds of romances I've read over the years. Main characters suffering angst and anguish have been drawn better by Laura Kinsale, Anna Campbell, Jean Ross Ewing (Julia Ross), Carla Kelly and Mary Jo Putney (pre-Lost Lords), to name a few. My personal favorite books by Suzanne Enoch have been her relatively light-hearted will-he-or-won't-he-get-her-to-bed romances, such as LONDON'S PERFECT SCOUNDREL, THE RAKE, REFORMING A RAKE, etc. They are sexy, not particularly historically accurate, but great fun to read when you're in the mood for a frothy romance with good chemistry between H/h.

So I don't need any more heroes, be they soldiers or explorers, with emotional and physical traumas, unless their stories can really, really affect me emotionally. This one didn't and that's why I'm wondering how many Adventurers' Club romances Enoch is planning. On page 3 of this novel, we find out that the club has 15 members. Please tell me that doesn't mean 15 novels. I could, however, go for a book about the Duke of Sommerset. It would be nice to find out more about him and why he has set up this refuge for troubled adventurers. That might be a book worth reading.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very similar to England's Perfect Hero, May 3, 2010
This review is from: A Lady's Guide to Improper Behavior (Mass Market Paperback)
I really enjoyed this book, although it was very similar to Enoch's previous novel, England's Perfect Hero. The characters are likeable - even when they are trying not to be! A quick, fun read.
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