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Wicked Intentions (Signet Eclipse) [Mass Market Paperback]

Lydia Joyce (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Signet Eclipse December 2, 2008
doing something bad can feel so good...

Since the mysterious death of his brother Thomas Hyde, Viscount Varcourt has been as cold and distant with his family as he is with the world around him...

In aristocratic society, Esmeralda is well-known as a psychic. Moving amongst the elite, she keeps her true intentions hidden from all.

Esmeralda’s keen interest in his family evokes Thomas’ suspicion and scorn. But their first confrontation swiftly turns from a struggle for control to an erotic battle that neither can afford to lose.


Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

For years, Thomas Hyde, Viscount Varcourt, has not dealt with the rumors that he was responsible for his older brother’s death, but now Esmeralda, London’s most famous spiritualist, has not only convinced his mother that her “visions” hold the truth of that matter, she has also “given” her mother a valuable ruby necklace. Determined to get Esmeralda out of his mother’s life, Thomas engages in a battle of wits and wiles with the mysterious, veiled woman, but Esmeralda has her own plan for revenge. With its rich yet subtle characterization, elegantly detailed and boldly sensual romance, and atmospheric plot suffused with dark intrigue and edgy danger, Joyce’s latest Victorian romance is another literary triumph. --John Charles

Review

“The next great romance author has arrived, and her name is Lydia Joyce.”
—Lisa Kleypas, New York Times bestselling author of Devil in Winter

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Signet (December 2, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0451225678
  • ISBN-13: 978-0451225672
  • Product Dimensions: 6.6 x 4.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,541,153 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

When I was very young, I didn't want to be a writer. I wanted to be a grandma. After all, grandmas don't have to work, they enjoy the company of children whenever they desire, and whenever they don't, they send them home to their parents. I would wear a large-old fashioned hat, have salt-and-pepper Gibson girl hair, and grow roses.

When I discovered that grandma-ing was not a career, I settled on writing as second best.

I began dictating my first stories to my mother before I could write. I filled notebooks in elementary school, and in middle school and high school, I wrote over 800 manuscript pages in my spare time as well as four plays that saw production.

Yet I never seriously considered writing as a career after elementary school. Writers starve, I was always told; a writer makes a decent wage about as often as pigs fly. And I wanted to make money, so I moved from Texas to Indiana to enroll in Purdue's engineering program.

I hated it.

Finally, I decided there was a good deal of difference between being good at a thing and liking it and that liking it was more important, so I left engineering. After changing my major a second time, I still managed to graduate in four years with majors in English and Spanish and a minor in religious studies--and almost another major in creative writing if illness hadn't prevented me from completing it. Meanwhile, I wrote three manuscripts and began submitting them and collecting rejection letters.

After graduation, I married a wonderful man I met my sophomore year, and so far we have one son. We're now living on a half acre in the mountains of New Mexico, where I write full time and update my website as frequently as possible.

I got my first contract in the late spring of 2004, two years after I graduated from college, and I'm hoping to sell many more books!

In addition to writing, I am a competitive ballroom dancer as well as a sometime gardener.

 

Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
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2 star:
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not what I was expecting, even from Lydia Joyce..., December 6, 2008
This review is from: Wicked Intentions (Signet Eclipse) (Mass Market Paperback)
I have enjoyed Lydia Joyce's historical romances in the past, especially their flirtation with the dark side of a character's emotions. I enjoy her prose and her distinctive voice. However, I was more than a little uncomfortable reading this book. If frankly felt more like an erotic thriller, and NOT like a romance.

At the risk of spoiling, the first sexual encounter between the characters was in the first quarter of the book and literally made my jaw drop. Is it rape when the female lead decides to surrender her body willingly, hoping to distract the male lead and having taken preventative measures against pregnancy, only to be taken anally against her will?

That scene lingered in my mind throughout the book. As much as I thought she gave depth and meaning to both lead characters, I couldn't leave that act of violence and submission behind.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Raw, surprisingly intense historical romance, June 4, 2009
This review is from: Wicked Intentions (Signet Eclipse) (Mass Market Paperback)
Plot Summary: A mysteriously veiled woman named Esmeralda has been entertaining London's aristocrats with her visions and readings. Thomas Hyde, Viscount Varcourt, becomes alarmed when Esmeralda sinks her hooks into his mother, who has never been the same since her eldest son's death. Thomas has been living under a presumption of guilt regarding his brother's death, and while harassing Esmeralda he strikes an odd bargain with her; she'll use her powers of persuasion to discover the truth about the boy's death in exchange for a reprieve from Thomas's persecution.

Historical romances are often guilty of following a predictable script, and it's one of my main beefs against them, however I know that I'm in for a treat when they can surprise me. This one is going to stand out in my mind for its raw, shocking intensity, and I give Lydia Joyce props for writing a very adult story. Other reviewers have already given spoilers about the sex scenes, but frankly I'm tired of reading cookie-cutter love scenes where sex is broken down into choreographed dance steps. I couldn't predict what was coming next, and yes, some of it shocked me, but I'll take that feeling over boredom any day. Granted, the sex is of a kinky and controlling nature, so fans who like more traditional love scenes may want to steer clear.

The attraction and antagonism between Thomas and Esmeralda ("Em") kept building through the book, and it hung on until the very end. This couple never settles into the cozy love-nest mode that I see in most romances, and it keeps everything unsettled and agitated. Since they can't trust each other, it's the sex that binds them and overcomes the doubts in their minds. Normally I'm not a fan of romances that take this backward approach, but I must admit that it works well with the story.

I was impressed by Em's razor-sharp mind. She's a genius at reading people and manipulating them like puppets, but I don't hold it against her since impoverished gentlewomen had no honest means of supporting themselves. Em is a gusty survivor, which I always appreciate in a heroine.

Thomas came across as conflicted, ever-suspicious, and hungry for Em. He's one of those broody types who never cracks a joke or a smile, and given his childhood as the spare who took care of the heir, it makes sense. His brother was first in line, but he was an extreme autistic savant (I'm playing doctor here; those symptoms seem to fit my diagnosis), and so Thomas grew up with the heavy burden of watching over his older brother. It would make anyone old and bitter before their time.

I was deeply immersed in this story and I didn't come up for air until the end, so in my book this rates as very good.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Too Dark and Disappointing (D Grade), January 19, 2009
This review is from: Wicked Intentions (Signet Eclipse) (Mass Market Paperback)
Thomas Hyde, Viscount Varcourt, is still haunted by the death of his brother Harry after all these years. The ton blamed Thomas for the death, even though he had nothing to do with it. He was only a young boy then, and his older brother Harry was `special'; he had an incredible mind but could not function in society. He was shunned and kept in the nursery. The one day he was let out during a house party, he was found dead in a stream. Because Thomas left Harry by that stream to fend for himself, he feels incredible guilt. His mother, Lady Hamilton, barely makes it day to day because of the loss. She goes through life bereft, looking for a reason to live. She may have finally found the one person who can help her. Her name is Esmeralda, and she is the toast of the ton for she can speak with the dead and can help Lady Hamilton find peace.

Thomas knows Esmeralda is a con and he will find out why she has targeted his mother. He would love nothing more then to place his hands around her veiled covered face and squeeze the life out of her; but because he also lusts after her, he would also like to lie in between her thighs. She is an enigma and an enemy, a puzzle he will solve, even if he must plunder and force himself upon her to make her tell him all her secrets.

Esmeralda is indeed playing a game and a ruse in order to ruin her half-brother who denied her existence and what was rightfully hers. She will make him pay and then disappear forever. But her plans are ruined as Varcourt stalks her, wanting answers from her lying lips. She will use her body as payment for his silence. Varcourt will take Esmeralda's body, willing or not, plus her promise to find out what happened to his brother the day he died. Esmeralda has no choice but to do what Varcourt wants because the man she wants revenge against may also be the one Varcourt is looking for.

Wicked Intentions is a dark and disturbing gothic set in Regency England. This is a tale that has a great deal of violence in its pages, and I am not just talking about murder. The violence is what Varcourt does to Esmeralda. Because Varcourt has such seething anger towards Esmeralda, he brutally forces her to have sex with him. Some may have different interpretations of the first sex scene between these two, but from my standpoint, Varcourt forces himself into Esmeralda's home, throws her on the bed, and after she taunts him, he roughly has sex with her. Yes, she makes her body respond, but his actions are of the worst kind. Not only does he do this once, but then he kidnaps Esmeralda, ties her to his bed, slaps her across the face because she hurls insults at him and then he has sex with her again. Esmeralda does respond to Varcourt, but only because if she didn't, Varcourt would be the worst type of abuser, the type of hero we are so used to reading about years ago when they didn't have a care for the heroine, other then to plunder her to his will. Varcourt does that here in great detail.

I wasn't sure what Lydia was trying to accomplish with the underlying violence, both in words and actions between Varcourt and Esmeralda. These two didn't have any chemistry that I could find appealing, and Varcourt's opinion and actions against Esmeralda made for very uncomfortable reading. At least I could understand Esmeralda's plans of revenge, and her own story was fascinating. But the moment she is forced to help Varcourt find his brother's killer, I found that to be just too much. It seemed to me that the plot with Varcourt's brother was added on to give the story more of a mystery, as well as to try and explain Varcourt's motivations. Unfortunately, I lost all interest in Varcourt's motivations the moment he forced himself into Esmeralda's body and life.

Lydia Joyce can write some fabulous gothic historicals. Wicked Intentions does have a gothic feel but it was lacking so much form what I usually find and enjoy in her work.

Katiebabs
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
wicked intentions
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Lady Hamilton, Lydia Joyce, Lord Varcourt, Lord Olthwaite, Lord Hamilton, Madame Esmeralda, Lady James, Lady Edgington, Madame Violca, Hamilton House, Miss Hawthorne, Lord Gifford, Martha Grey, Lord Edgington, Reform Bill, Uncle William, Emmeline Dunn, Miss Dunn, Duchess of Rushworth
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