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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Relax, lie back and think of England...., June 22, 2007
This is a delightful, big old chunk of a book that refuses to be hurried. The author is a master of this genre and not for a moment will your reading pleasure be taken for granted. We care greatly for the male/female leads seeing in both of them the pain of the outsider and how their very forward-thinking behavior contrasts with the rest of the stuffy ton. Plus the secondary characters!!! There are enough wily servants, clever Scots, Irish, effeminate "stylists/decorators" and plotting family members to stock a small Shakespeare company. Each one is carefully personalized--individual enough so that we enjoy their character, smile at their interference in the leads' lives and wait for their next "bit o' business". Of course, there are subplots, spy deals, smuggling and all that kind of window dressing but appropriate for the time and the business of international shipping--which our female lead handles with ease and independance. If you need to rush--this book is not for you. But for a lovely vacation or all that time waiting in the orthodontist's office--this gem is perfect.
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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Oh, Liz Carlyle - you can do better than this. I'm disappointed., August 27, 2007
Liz Carlyle is capable of so much, so I don't know what happened here. I guess that she decided to pick up a few of the successful elements from previous books - a practical, business-minded woman who can compete in a man's world, a dastardly rake, fierce sexuality, a hint of intrigue - and hoped that if she tossed them together any which way the results would be satisfactory. Well, she was wrong.
What bothered me here is that Xanthia and Nash's relationship is so exclusively sexual that although I totally believed that they were hot for one another, and would go out of their way to arrange trysts and such, I never saw any kind of loving or emotional attachment developing at the same time. The kiss, they grope in public, they meet in back alleys; ok, sure. All of the soulmate, yearning for one another, emotional trappings just seemed like the kind of self-deception so many people indulge in when they don't want to see how simple and base their own motives really are.
If Liz Carlyle were writing erotica, this might fly - but she's not, she's writing a romance where the love connection never happens. And the book suffers as a result.
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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Full-strength Carlyle, June 28, 2007
Carlyle's most recent efforts, while they were quite enjoyable, don't quite pack the punch of earlier books like No True Gentleman or My False Heart, both of which are on my keeper shelf. With Never Lie to A Lady, Carlyle is drinking caffeine again. A strong, beautiful heroine who runs a business and has needs of her own; a libertine English marquess by way of Montenegro who hates the Turks. Two people drawn to each other, a gun-running plot and the search for a spy. Carlyle knows her pre-Victorian London and she draws it almost as well as Barry Eisler does Tokyo in his Rain series. The difference is Carlyle's London hasn't existed for almost 200 years. But you see the Docklands and the Pool, the bustling commerce, the lawns running down to a rural Thames. If you loved Max Rohan and Elliott Armstrong, the Marquess of Nash is cut from the same exciting cloth. And Max and George Kemble are back in this book, partners in crime-fighting yet again. I read this book from cover to cover in one sitting.
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