|
|
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Oh, joy!, August 21, 2000
Oh, frabjous day! Thank you, Signet, for giving us this perfectly splendiferous double-dip, just in time for those hot summer days when reading the ultra-cool Ms. Layton is the perfect answer for what to do while lazing in a hammock under a big, green, leafy tree.Forget the champagne, you won't need it with this wonderful duo. Any time you feel the need to treat yourself to something truly splendid, there is no vintage as splendid as vintage Layton. THE DUKE'S WAGER is a re-issue of her very first book, and all the reasons for her continuing success swirl and bubble around the reader like the very finest of sparkling libations. Who else but Edith Layton could--or would?--write a Regency romance in which the supposed villain gets the girl? When Regina Berryman, a beautiful commoner with no family and no dowry, is left totally adrift by the death of her uncle, she is perceived as a target for the affections of two of the most attractive men in London--the Duke of Torquay, Jason Thomas, and the Marquis of Bessacarr, Sinjun St. Charles. One offers love, the other wants her for his mistress. Although men have, for centuries, made a near-crusade about male honor, it is Regina's own sense of honor which brings both men literally to their knees. Within the space of an hour, she receives the final accolade from each of them--a proposal of marriage. Regina has learned her lessons only too well, and makes the only possible choice. You'll want to thrust your fist in the air and shout, "YEESSSS!" when you come to the end of this book. But you don't have to wonder whatever happened to these stay-in-your-mind characters. Layton brings many of them into her subsequent books. LORD OF DISHONOR didn't follow the above book chronologically, but no matter. It's still a marvelous--and unusual--vintage. Amanda Amberley is visiting her mother when Christian Jarrow, Viscount North stops to visit. Her Mama, the Countess of Clovelly, who has had a stable relationship for lo, these many years with the Duke of Laxey, (in spite of having a husband of her own somewhere else) seizes the moment and misdirects the handsome young man to the blue room rather then the gray one where he was supposed to be. But then, the blue room is where Amanda has been tucked away. It's so hard to pay attention to these details, given the fact that the dashing young lord has one eye of blue and one of gray. So distracting. Especially when he smiles just so. Thus begins this tale of two splendidly handsome young folks, with outwardly not a care in the world. Inwardly, however--ah, that's a different story entirely. Being deprived of a loving family, of course that is the thing each most wants, and yet finds it the hardest to acquire. Edith Layton is a wordsmith deserving of that term. She uses words in a way that no other has--or does. She's long been one of my very favorites, if for no other reason than her incredibly enticing heroes. Indeed, this book contains my all-time favorite Layton line - ". . . the only task more difficult than seducing a lad of eighteen might be that of breathing in and out . . ."
|