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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Rules of Surrender,
By A Customer
This review is from: Rules of Surrender (Governess Brides, Book 1) (Mass Market Paperback)
Read this book!But don't start it if you have to work the next day because you'll be up all night. I liked Charlotte a lot, she was feisty and very proper. The children were good, especially Leila who made trouble without meaning to. Wynter was the best. He thought men were better than women, and it was funny watching Charlotte teach him differently. Also, it was good to see Adorna from THAT SCANDALOUS EVENING get her own romance. Great stuff!
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very "The King & I",
By Passionate (Miramar, FL United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rules of Surrender (Governess Brides, Book 1) (Mass Market Paperback)
In Ms. Dodd's latest work we meet Charlotte, a governess who is hired by Adorna--the incredibly beautiful "airhead" from "That Scandalous Evening". Charlotte is to teach Adorna's two grandchildren, who have grown up in Arabia; what she doesn't know is that she also needs to instruct Wynter, their father, on the intricacies of British etiquette.If you have seen "The King & I", you'll have a pretty good idea of how their interplay is going to go. Wynter is very Yul Brenner, right down to the hands-on-his-hips stance. On the other side is Charlotte, who tries to remain at all times the picture of British gentility when what she'd really like to do sometimes is hit him upside the head with a frying pan. Sparks fly when Wynter gets it into his head that Charlotte would make a convenient wife. The sparring between these two characters is entertaining, at times what we all wished had happened betweeen Deborah Kerr and the King of Siam. Unlike their counterparts in so many other works, the children's antics here ring true and are hilarious enough to endear them to readers. However, after having so enjoyed Adorna in the previous novel, I wished we could have seen more of her "I'll pretend I'm stupid to get what I want" act. I love Christina Dodd stories, and was especially awaiting this one. What I usually appreciate about Ms. Dodd are her strong, no-nonsense heroines. This book left me a little disappointed in the last couple of chapters, in that I really didn't understand what Charlotte wanted or how it could be resolved. All in all, I thought Jane Higgenbothem (from Scandalous) was a stronger character. However, this book is clearly the first of a trilogy, and I'm awaiting the stories of Charlotte's two partners in the governess business.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Beauty and the Beast,
By ladybug10 "ladybug10" (Houston, Texas USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Rules of Surrender (Governess Brides, Book 1) (Mass Market Paperback)
Lady Charlotte Dalrumple (also known as Miss Priss) has the unenviable task of civilizing two children who have known only life in a Bedouin tribe until their father decides that it's time to return to his family responsibilities in 19th century England. The children, however, turn out to be a piece of cake - it's their father who is truly the beast. Although he lived his first fifteen years in England, he seems to have lost his civilized English veneer and he's wholeheartedly assimilated a thoroughly male-centric world view: men are like the sun, and women revolve around the sun, loving it and drawing from its warmth and protection. Of course, "everyone" knows the sun doesn't love those that orbit it - its job is only to stay strong, warm, and functional. Picture Miss Priss trying to teach this man (because she ends up getting drawn in to becoming his governess, too) how to conduct himself in polite Victorian society, when HE has already decided that she is need of his warmth and protection (and it doesn't hurt that he likes her body, too), and you have the story.I liked the plot, but I found that the characters were not always as likable. Lady Charlotte often came across as a thoroughly neurotic woman who developed a load of guilt for something fairly tame (however, I suppose Victorian England really was that repressed - I just kept waiting for us to learn about a far juicier past than she turned out to have). I found Lord Ruskin surprisingly dense, for a man portrayed with a fair amount of native intelligence. However, the conversations between these two sparkled, and the sexual scenes were slowly and wickedly developed. I stifled a laugh at the vision of Lady Charlotte falling off her chair in panic, in front of Queen Victoria - the author has a gift for painting pictures with words! All in all, an enjoyable read.
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