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Notorious (Signet Historical Romance) [Mass Market Paperback]

Virginia Henley (Author)
2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Signet Historical Romance August 2, 2011
Never before published-from the New York Times bestselling author of Infamous

The daughter of Jory de Warenne and lady-in-waiting to Queen Isabelle, the spirited Brianna de Beauchamp is betrothed to the distinguished Lincoln Robert de Warenne, but yearns for a deeper passion. When she meets the dark and dangerous Wolf Mortimer-a man who possesses the Celtic gift of second sight-she finds it impossible not to surrender to his fierce desire. And when Wolf's father-the queen's lover, Roger Mortimer-is imprisoned in the Tower of London, she finds herself swept on an adventure that not only puts her heart in peril, but jeopardizes the life of the man who could be her destiny...


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Rife with political intrigue, this medieval historical romance never lacks for suspense, but overblown language, a too-easy wrapup and excessive melodrama undermine the reader's enjoyment. "I shouldn't... but I shall!" is noblewoman Brianna de Beauchamp's credo, and she applies it often throughout. Should she involve herself in the brewing battle between England's marcher barons and the degenerate King Edward II? And, perhaps more importantly, should she provoke the handsome and dangerous Wolf Mortimer? She shouldn't but she does, making herself an essential channel of communication between the barons and their ally, Queen Isabelle, as well as the object of Wolf's fantasies. Veteran author Henley (Infamous) weaves a colorful tapestry full of notorious real-life noblemen and royals, proving that fact can be more fascinating than fiction. However, Henley would do better to heed the "less is more" doctrine; too often characters restate facts, and Henley compulsively inserts distracting exclamatories for added drama ("I foolishly forgave you once, but never again. I wouldn't lower myself to spit on you!"). Despite its flaws, this dynamic, heavily embellished history lesson manages to do what few can—illuminate and entertain. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

In 1322 Hugh Despencer, King Edward II's lover, has turned the ruler against the Marchers. As Edward prepares the royal castles in Wales for war, the Marcher lords rebel against the Crown. Lady Brianna de Beauchamp, daughter of a powerful Marcher, is a strong-willed, resourceful healer. She's known since childhood that she would marry her charming cousin, but then "Wolf" Mortimer and his wolf come on the scene. Possessed of fantastic psychic powers, Wolf soon takes over Brianna's dreams. Few writers incorporate such rich historical detail into their romances as Henley, and Wolf and Brianna's story will appeal to fans of the sensual romances of Bertrice Small and Susan Johnson. Shelley Mosley
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 18 and up
  • Mass Market Paperback: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Signet (August 2, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0451221052
  • ISBN-13: 978-0451221056
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #123,129 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

New York Times best-seller Virginia Henley is the author of 26 lush and lusty historical romances and 5 short stories. Her books are published in 16 languages around the world. She is the recipient of a dozen awards including a Lifetime Achievement Award from Romantic Times, A Maggie Award for Excellence from the Georgia Romance Writers, and a Waldenbook Award for top-selling long historical for 1994.

The St. Petersburg Times calls Henley "The Queen of Steamy Romance."

Kathe Robin, RT Book Reviews says: "Henley's gift for bringing remarkable women to life in colorful, turbulent times is what turns her romances into keepers. Henley heats up the pages with her love scenes, and her skill at portraying actual historical personages with humanity while maintaining historical accuracy wins our minds. Henley knows what historical romance is all about and always gives the readers what they want."

Henley says: "My hero is always dark, dominant and dangerous. Then I create a woman who is a match for him...or more than a match!
Men come up to me at conferences and thank me for writing my books. One man said, "I don't read them, but I always know when my wife is reading a Henley!"

My next book The Dark Earl goes on sale September 6 and is the third in the series following The Decadent Duke, and The Irish Duke.

I have just turned two of my backlist books into Kindle ebooks. Wild Hearts and Bold Conquest are historical romances. My novella Hot As Fire, also available on Kindle, is my only contemporary. I have a short story up on Kindle called Letter of Love that is FREE.

Next month I will be offering a new ebook that is a Southern family saga.
MASTER OF PARADISE tells the story of Nicholas Peacock who is disinherited of his title and wealth in England. He sails to Charleston, South Carolina, and starts a cotton plantation just before the Civil War disrupts everyone's life.

 

Customer Reviews

15 Reviews
5 star:
 (5)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (7)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
2.9 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Unpleasant, June 16, 2007
By 
Alianore (United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Notorious (Signet Historical Romance) (Mass Market Paperback)
Notorious, the sequel to Infamous, is set in the 1320s and purports to be the romance of Brianna de Beauchamp [ludicrous modern name, there] and Wolf Mortimer. Many of the characters in Notorious were real people in fourteenth-century England.

I say 'purports' because Brianna and Wolf disappear from the narrative at regular intervals, while Henley focuses on the story of Edward II and his wife Isabella, and their lovers. Here, Notorious becomes deeply unpleasant, and readers of a sensitive disposition may become deeply dismayed, as I did, at the endless references to Edward II as 'unnatural' and 'perverted' because he loves men. He's also portrayed as highly feminised and weak, a horrible and offensive stereotype of a gay man. Queen Isabella's adultery with Mortimer is acceptable, however, because her lover Mortimer is so ultra-manly. And heterosexual.

The characters are not medieval English people, as they're said to be, but modern Americans, who think, act and talk American. Brianna has freedoms that no medieval noblewoman could ever have dreamed of. The overall impression is one of modern American characters dashing round England and Scotland in fancy dress.

In Notorious, any resemblance to real fourteenth-century England and real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. I laughed out loud at the presence of the earl of Warwick in 1327, when historically he died in 1315. Notorious is not even an interesting romance, as the 'hero' Wolf is a creep who uses his gift of second sight to spy on Brianna while she's undressing, and Brianna herself is whiny and spoilt. Her catchphrase "I shoudn't - but I shall!" gets even more irritating than her mother Jory de Warenne's "I've quite made up my mind!" in Infamous.

Anyone looking for a well-written, sexy romance with accurate historical detail will be wasting their time.
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12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A lukewarm romantic historical drama short on romance, history, and drama, but long on hypocrisy, May 23, 2007
By 
Charlene Vickers (Winnipeg, Manitoba) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Notorious (Signet Historical Romance) (Mass Market Paperback)
Notorious purports to tell the story of Brianna de Beauchamp, a character from one of Henley's previous novels, whose budding romance with Wolf Mortimer entangles her in the intrigues between Edward II, his wife Isabella, and their respective lovers.

Unfortunately, the romance ends up taking a back burner to the political intrigue. Normally I wouldn't mind this, but in Notorious the intrigue seems to be more an excuse for Henley to repeatedly call Edward II 'unnatural' because he was gay. (I kid you not: if I had a nickel for every instance of 'unnatural' in this book, I'd be down at the local coffee shop buying a latte or five.) Now it's true that homophobia was universal in 14th century England, but it's also true that homosexuality wasn't talked about as much as it is now, nor was it considered the ultimate evil that these characters seem to feel it was. Edward II was unpopular, but much of that is due to his views on taxation and the power of the commons. Henley overestimates the contemporary interest in Edward's private life and all but ignores the policies and acts that in reality led to the rebellion.

There's also a strain of hypocrisy in this book which (to be honest) I didn't notice until another reviewer pointed it out. On second reading, though, it's blatantly obvious: Isabella's grasping, greedy, power-mad lover Roger de Mortimer is a hero, but Edward's grasping, greedy, power-mad lover Hugh Despenser is a villain. Yet they act exactly the same, both in real life and in this book. So why is Mortimer heroic but Despenser a villain? Because Mortimer was committing adultery with a woman instead of a man? Or is Roger de Mortimer a hero simply because he's the brother of the ostensible heroine's love interest? If so, that's sloppy writing, especially given the historical facts.

You may be wondering by now what happened to Brianna, the ostensible protagonist. I was wondering that myself. Her story is pushed off the pages as the struggle between Edward and Isabella and their camps takes centre stage. The relationship between Brianna and Wolf and her feelings about both him and the man she was pre-contracted to aren't fully developed. I didn't get the sense that the attraction the two of them obviously felt for each other developed into love: Henley doesn't show enough of their budding relationship, and every time I thought she would begin to develop it she goes back to the Edward-Isabella story (throwing a few 'unnaturals' in for good measure). I think that if a story is supposed to be about two people, the story should be primarily about them, not about those around them.

Finally, and this again is something other reviewers have mentioned, Henley calls the method of Edward II's torturous death "ingenious" in the epilogue. I hope to God above that Ms. Henley didn't mean it the way I read it. If so - my heavens, how offensive.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars I just wasn't that into it...., May 21, 2008
This review is from: Notorious (Signet Historical Romance) (Mass Market Paperback)
So, let me say first of course that I am a fan of Ms. Henley's; hopelessly devoted to every single book. I started reading her about 13 years ago as a high school senior and have continued on to now. But lately....her books....just....havent had the same....punch. This book which was a spin off of Infamous I believe, and the main character just isnt as interesting or entertaining as her mother Jory. I just..didnt cae about what happened to her, at all....seriously. The same of true of the sequel to "A woman of passion". In that book ( a woman of passion), VH totally stepped away from the formulaic boy meets girl story and gives her heroine 2 previous husbands before she marries the love of her life. I tend to stay away from books that see the heroine passed from man to man like a beer bottle at a super bowl party. (See Beatrice Smalls) It was a risk, but the character, Elisabeth Hardwick-Cavendish...was so incredible that the book became a delight to read. Her grandaughters story was just....blah!. just like in this book, she didnt have the fire nor the passion that her mother had. Although a fantastic author, she hasnt quite mastered the "genelogical genre" that authors like Johanna Lindsey with her Mallory series, Jude Devereax with her Montgomerys or even Julia Quinn with her Brigertons has. Each character in the family had their own life, and spark, so that you wanted to read about their exploits and adventures. None of Virginia Henleys characters decendents capture the vivacity and vibrance of their forebearors. Does this mean I wont buy her next book....of course not. I LOVE HER. and....who you love...you forgive for thier indiscretions. This book, for me was a major indiscretion.
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