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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very fun!, February 10, 2005
This review is from: Miss Whitlow's Turn (Signet Regency Romance) (Paperback)
Miss Whitlow's Turn by Jenna Mindel
February 10, 2005
Courtesy of WWW.loveromances.com
This was a fun regency romp written by Jenna Mindel. MISS WHITLOW'S TURN is the story of George Clasby, as he desperately seeks a way to clean up his reputation. He is known to have flings with married women, and now that he sees many of his friends marrying and settling down, he realizes he wants the same thing too. Unfortunately, his reputation is well known, and no single woman that is of a decent background wants to be associated with him.
George comes upon a brilliant plan to call on Miss Harriet Whitlow, who is now out on her third season and has been known to turn down suitors left and right. He has no desire to settle down with her, but they have already been acquainted and he thinks this is an easy way to ease his way back into respectable society. Since Harriet is highly respected in society, anyone associated with her would surely be accepted into society as well.
Harriet, on the other hand, has had her eye on George ever since they had met during her first season. When George turns his attentions on her, she is overjoyed and cannot believe her luck. Unfortunately, her father hates George and will not have his daughter wed to someone of the likes of him. Instead, he has chosen for his daughter Lord Grafton, a man that Harriet finds boring and annoying and she needs to find a way to get rid of him before she is stuck with him for life! Can she find a way to stop Grafton from proposing to her and at the same time win over George's heart?
Very fun reading! Any one who loves romances and has yet to try out a regency romance needs to read this one. This reviewer really enjoys the humor that often comes with these regencies, and MISS WHITLOW'S TURN was no exception. Very humorous and well written, with characters that felt very real and not just stereotypical people from this era. MISS WHITLOW'S TURN is highly recommended to lovers of regencies, and those who have yet to read one.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A delightful traditional regency!, June 25, 2005
This review is from: Miss Whitlow's Turn (Signet Regency Romance) (Paperback)
Harriet Whitlow is a nice and prim lady who is starting her third season. She has had several suitors, but she is hopelessly in love with George Clasby, a notorious rake with a tarnished reputation. George is regretting the choices he has made in his life and wants what his friends have, he wants to find love and get married, but first he needs to have access to proper ladies. At a Christmas celebration they share a wonderful kiss under the kissing bough and after that Harriet decides that she has to do something, that i'ts now or never, since her father has a new and very eligible suitor interested in her: Lord Garfton.
George had always thought of Harriet as pretty and nice, but too proper for his tastes, and also as untouchable as the moon. However, he thinks that if he is seen among her suitors and acepted by her father, other parents will think him eligible too. He spoke to her father to ask for his permission to visit and asured him that he hasn't any intention on really courting her and won't stand in the way of Lord Grafton. When Harriet knows about his reasons to befriend her she is disapointed, but soon she decides to use this opportunity to try to gain his love. Now, she only has to discourage Grafton and show him that she is not right for him.
This is a delightful read! It's my first book by this author and I love it! It is the third one in a series about related characters, but stands along perfectly. Both hero and heroine have flaws, but are very likeable. George has a tarnished reputation for being in affairs with married ladies, but he is tired of that life and it's looking for something more. And personally I love a hero with red hair. Harriet has had a tendre for him for two years and thinks that the love of a woman can help him reform and she has decided to act on her feelings. If only her father wasn't so sure of what is best for her. There are many secondary characters who add to the story and I definitively have to look for the related books, since I want to read more about them.
The book has a lot of humorous moments, specially when Harriet is trying to scare away Lord Grafton, and some touching ones too. I liked to see the friendship and love between them growing. I was cheering for her and wanting her to get the man she wanted. And Lord Grafton is so full of himself that is going to be great see him get what he doesn't want in the next one in the series. I'm already eagerly awaiting for it.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A nice, 4 star read, January 30, 2005
This review is from: Miss Whitlow's Turn (Signet Regency Romance) (Paperback)
Harriet Whitlow has a secret. Ever since her come out, she's been in love with her friend, George Clasby. But Mr. Clasby is a rake, completely unacceptable for a respectable girl like Harriet. Her father would not approve, even if Clasby DID think of her as more than a friend.
George Clasby knows his reputation is less than spotless, but he wants to reform. To do so, he recruits the help of his friend, Harriet Whitlow. If the ton sees him in the company of Harriet, perhaps some of her respectability will rub off on him? Over time, Harriet piques his interest in other ways. But Clasby doesn't stand a chance, as Harriet's father seems determined to marry his daughter off to a pompous earl named Lord Grafton.
Harriet is determined to win Clasby's heart, and to shake off the attentions of Lord Grafton... even if that means resorting to drastic measures.
I was looking forward to "Miss Whitlow's Turn", as it has characters from two of Mindel's previous novels, "Miranda's Mistake" and "Kiss of a Highwayman." I was looking forward to Clasby and Harriet's story, and it does not disappoint. It's a very enjoyable book, thanks to Jenna Mindel's breezy dialogue and strong storytelling. Some readers might think the book's pacing is slow, but I didn't.
However, there were a few incidents that didn't really settle well with me. Harriet, a supposed "paragon of virtue", puts herself in scandalous situations SEVERAL times throughout the book, and Mindel didn't even acknowlege all of them. I might be nitpicking, but I don't think it was acceptable behavior for a girl in the Regency period to slip off to a bachelor's town house. Harriet is a compelling character, but I think the reader was supposed to believe she was virtuous, but we're shown something entirely different.
All in all, I would definitely recommend it for anyone looking for a light, entertaining book. If you enjoy this, and you haven't read them, you should certainly read Mindel's other books. My personal favorite was "Kiss of the Highwayman."
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