TEST
I’m always interested in romance novels that play with the format a little, where the author tells her story in a way that’s different than the norm. French Twist is a book like that, which is why I know it won’t work for everyone. Judged by conventional standards of how a romance novel should work, it would probably be considered a failure. This is a book where the main characters don’t talk to each other for ninety-five percent of the story. And yet, despite the lack of communication, Margot Dalton managed to do what countless other romances don’t: convince me that her characters were deeply in love.
Justin Delacroix and Madeline Bertrand fell in love early and married young, raising three children together. But Justin’s dedication to his law career led him to neglect his marriage and his wife. With their children grown, Madeline found herself alone too many nights. Finally, she left him, abandoning their home in Louisiana to start a new life for herself in Colorado.
Now Justin is a powerful and respected judge. He has accomplished everything he worked for, but also no longer has the one thing he wants. He’s alone, without the only woman he’s ever loved. Then one of their children is injured in an accident, and Madeline comes back to Bayou Beltane. Her close proximity renews his desire for them to be together again. He doesn’t know that the visit brings back Madeline’s own memories of their life together. She never stopped loving him either.
Meanwhile, in the subplot, Justin befriends a teenage girl, a tomboy who’s been abused and tormented by her rough and tumble brothers. Reminded of his own daughters, he takes her under his wing and tries to help her come into her own. He doesn’t anticipate the rumors that inevitably arise from an older man seen taking a much younger woman to dinner and buying her nice clothes.
French Twist is very much a character-driven story, without much of an external plot at all. It’s a story of longing, of three people who each want something they’re afraid they’ll never have. For Justin and Madeline, it’s each other. They’re still very much in love, but each of them is unwilling to reach out to the other, afraid of finding out that the other person no longer feels the same way. For Justin’s young protégé, it’s a better life. In a lesser book, she might have been a scheming vixen, working to come between the main couple. She’s not at all. She’s just a sweet girl with an underlying sadness and her own secret crush on a young man she doesn’t believe could see anything in her. The author paints such an empathetic portrayal of the character that by the time she receives the happy ending she never thought she’d have, it couldn’t be sweeter.
The whole book is quietly moving in much the same way. It’s like one of those movies whose main characters want to be together even though the audience knows they can’t meet until the very end. Likewise, Justin and Madeline circle around each other, reliving their memories of their romance and marriage, never quite managing to connect. Dalton creates a poignant mood of romantic longing that really worked for me. Even when the inevitable misunderstanding arose, caused by Justin’s relationship with the much younger woman, it didn’t bother me. I felt Madeline’s profound disappointment and the pain of their missed opportunity too deeply.
On another note, it was nice to see a story about a couple in their fifties (and also nice to see that the cover artist did an excellent job portraying them as two still very attractive people).
The Delta Justice series was one of the best of the Harlequin/Silhouette standalone series, with an overall plotline that held together very well through twelve books and excellent storytelling throughout. I would recommend the entire series. But French Twist is my favorite, the most emotional, the most romantic, the most moving. It stands on its own, with a contained story that doesn’t require having read any of the others to be understood and appreciated. It may not fit the mold of what usually constitutes a romance novel, but that’s exactly what it is.
Grade: A
Book Type: Contemporary Romance|Series Romance
Sensuality: Kisses
Review Date: 27/05/04
Publication Date: 1998/05
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.