TEST
As I read Ms. Essex’s new historical romance, A Sense of Sin, I thought of words by Angel (he of the iconic show Buffy the Vampire Slayer) as he contemplates his intricate feelings for Buffy. He muses, “Passion, it lies in all of us, sleeping…waiting…and though unwanted…unbidden…it will stir…open its jaws and howl. It speaks to us…guides us…passion rules us all, and we obey. What other choice do we have? Passion is the source of our finest moments. The joy of love…the clarity of hatred…and the ecstasy of grief. It hurts sometimes more than we can bear.” Rupert Delacorte, the Vincent Darling, hero of Ms. Essex’s lovely new novel, could have easily uttered those lines.
The story begins at a ball in Dartmouth where Del has come hunting Celia Burke, a girl whom the ton adoringly calls “the Ravishing Miss Burke.” Del plans to seduce, without a touch, then devastate this young woman he’s never met. He blames Celia for the suicide of his younger sister Emily who had been Celia’s closest friend. His passionate hatred for Celia wars with the instant pull he feels toward her and the deep affection he had for her — via anecdotes told in his sister’s letters — before Emily’s death. Del is a seething, simmering sensualist who, from the moment he sees Celia descending the ballroom stairs, is overwhelmed by the way Celia makes him feel.
Celia is equally drawn to Del. She too had fallen more than a little in love with him via the letters he wrote to Emily. When she finally meets him in all his tall, golden gorgeousness, she feels, for the first time in her life, profound physical desire. For all her external beauty, Celia is essentially a scholar. Her great passion in life, prior to listening to Del tell her all the ways he’d like to strip her naked and pleasure her, has been botany and scientifically cataloging the freshwater plants of Devon. She’s not just inexperienced; she’s unaware of the lure of the sexual world. Men, the boring aristocrats who court her for her face and family name, barely register with her… until she encounters Del. As he, using just his shockingly erotic words, whispers to Celia about desire, Celia discovers the power of passion.
I enjoyed Ms. Essex’s first novel, The Pursuit of Pleasure, but had a hard time visualizing her two lovers. I had no such trouble in A Sense of Sin. Ms. Essex is an accomplished writer and she deftly depicts not only Celia and Del, but a host of interesting secondary characters. Her Georgian households and their denizens have a palpable feel. Ms. Essex doesn’t shy away from the barriers class and power place between upper crust families and their servants; nor does she deny the compassion and care that often undergird those relationships. Celia’s maid, Bains; Del’s cook, Mrs. Bobbins; Lady Burke’s coachman, Mr. Filbert; and others, all bring verve and humor into the homes they serve and the story Ms. Essex tells. Del and Celia, apart and together, are two of the more vibrant lovers I’ve encountered in historical romance. Del, furious about his sister’s death, angry at his father for existing, and contemptuous of the legion of widows, harlots, and adulterous wives he’s bedded, is undone by Celia. Ms. Essex makes the way Del falls first in exhilarating lust and then in bewildering love with Celia a moving and tempestuous thing. Celia, a generous young woman without a whiff of saccharine sweetness to her, changes the way Del sees her and then, powerfully, the way he sees himself. And she, at heart a thinker, lets Del guide her to trust her heart, her body, and her passion for him as much as she trusts her brain. I loved their story.
There’s a compelling third character as well: The dead Emily Delacorte. As the book begins, Celia is being blackmailed by someone — initially she thinks it must be Del — who threatens to tell the world the real, damning reason Emily killed herself. Del thinks often about his sister and it is through his and Celia’s thoughts and conversations about Emily that her character is revealed. Del and Celia each loved Emily passionately, and the two grieve her death almost more than they can bear. The intrigues behind Emily’s demise — who really is blackmailing Celia and why — are gripping and affecting. The plot in A Sense of Sin dovetails beautifully with the developing relationship between Celia and Del.
I began this review writing about passion. The sexual tension as well as the eventual sex in this book is phenomenal. For much of the book, there is no physical relationship between Celia and Del — he has sworn not to lay a hand on her and she, of course, is bound by Georgian society’s rules for virginal girls. However, without a kiss or caress, Del seduces Celia as powerfully as any lover in literature. Cyrano has nothing on Viscount Darling. Del’s language of love – Ms. Essex’s language of love – is beautiful, carnal, and utterly seductive. And when he and Celia finally do touch, their passion is incendiary.
I loved the first 319 pages of this book. I didn’t want it to end and was discontented the novel stopped so abruptly. One moment, Celia and Del are facing down the true cause of Emily’s death; less than a quarter page later, evil has been dispatched and the lovers are in each other’s arms. Satisfying endings are often the most difficult task a novelist faces and, in this book, Ms. Essex has not mastered that particular challenge. A Sense of Sin, a story with so much passion — “the joy of love… the clarity of hatred… and the ecstasy of grief” — needs a potent finale. I hope in Ms. Essex’s next book (which I will buy without a second’s thought) she writes for her readers an ending as winning as all but the last page of this one.
Grade: B+
Book Type: European Historical Romance
Sensuality: Hot
Review Date: 10/06/11
Publication Date: 04/2011
Recent Comments …
Yep
This sounds delightful! I’m grabbing it, thanks
excellent book: interesting, funny dialogs, deep understanding of each character, interesting secondary characters, and also sexy.
I don’t think anyone expects you to post UK prices – it’s just a shame that such a great sale…
I’m sorry about that. We don’t have any way to post British prices as an American based site.
I have several of her books on my TBR and after reading this am moving them up the pile.