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While not terrible, Seduction in Silk is thoroughly undistinguished. The premise is unoriginal, the motivations of the characters are unclear, the hero is bland, the kindest possible word for the heroine is “prickly,” and the plot is meandering. Jo Beverley is a competent writer, but I need those competent words to contain an actual story.
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Peregrine Perriam inherits an estate from a distant relative, but the will stipulates that he must marry Claris Mallow, niece of the woman the relative once wronged. Claris, however, is violently anti-marriage. I guess because her parents were unhappy? It’s not really clear. She wants her independence, which apparently consists of being poor and taking her brothers along with her. I kept thinking wistfully about the eminently practical heroines of Carla Kelly novels.
When I said Claris is violently anti-marriage, I meant it literally. Perriam offers her the full income of the inherited estate and says he will stay to convince her to accept his offer; Claris rationally responds by shooting him at point-blank range. Fortunately, the gun turns out to be unloaded, but Claris didn’t know that. Her amused grandmother and companion thinks this was “grand to see” and makes her “a girl of spirit.” I think it makes her dangerously unhinged. You know that moment in Zoolander when Mugatu announces that Zoolander’s “looks” all look the same? This is how I feel as I read books which keep trying to convince me that shooting people is funny. “Death is permanent! Doesn’t anybody notice this? I feel like I’m taking crazy pills!” Lord of Scoundrels has a lot to answer for.
Anyway, Claris agrees to marry Perriam, for reasons neither she nor I was totally clear on. On some pages, it involved providing for her family; other times, she seemed to want security and luxury goods like oranges and silk. They go to the inherited house and clean it up for a while. She is scared straight by her near-murder of Perriam and renounces violence (“I shudder to think of it! I could have killed him!”) except when she isn’t scared straight and wants to be violent again (“If [Perriam broke his promise] she’d have reason to shoot him;” “It was as well she didn’t have a pistol to hand. The woman’s silken back was a very tempting target.”).
They have very little chemistry, but eventually a lot of sex. Claris gets pregnant and becomes obsessed with a family curse. The curse is mysterious because it is out of character for the woman who was supposed to have cast it, and by “mysterious,” I mean “you will figure this out immediately if you have more than two brain cells, which Claris does not.” There’s just enough time left for Claris to do something TSTL and for Perriam to solve a boring, off-camera spy plot before the the book ends.
I did enjoy the setting – Beverley is always good for some interesting details, like the Georgian marble carving industry and period garments. My grade reflects the fact that this story might not be so bad to somebody who hasn’t already read better versions of it (some of them by Beverley herself) twenty times already. Aside from the gun thing, which I acknowledge is personal, it wasn’t really bad, it was just dull.
Grade: C+
Book Type: European Historical Romance
Sensuality: Warm
Review Date: 02/08/13
Publication Date: 2013/08
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.