The Explorer Baroness

TEST

Julia Justiss concludes her Heirs in Waiting trilogy with The Explorer Baroness, a sweet tale about an independent importer and the travel-hungry baron-to-be who comes to love her.  The way Justiss intermarries two different cultures here is lovely, but I did groan at some very hoary old clichés that reared their ugly heads.

Gregory Lattimar, eldest (and only) son of Baron Vraux, loves to travel.  He can disappear when he travels, become just another passenger on the line, and shuck the worries pressing down on his shoulders that stem from his father’s dotty management of the family estate (he’s obsessed with antiques, as established in previous books).  Gregory knows he must marry for the sake of the title this season, but his plan is to pledge his troth to a woman with a spotless, saintly reputation to staunch some of the scandal his mother’s rampant cheating on his father has caused the family, and smooth the way for her reentry into society.  But at the moment he’s content to travel and try not to feel that lonely about it.

Charis Dunnfield’s father is a tradesman who imports antiques, which means she spends months at a time helping him in his work in places such as Constantinople, Tehran, and Baghdad.  Charis was raised partially within the Ottoman Empire, and her understanding of how marriage works is quite different from the western standard.  She doesn’t want to make a union which will, under British law, make everything she owns and everything she does the domain and rule of her husband.  To wit, she helps women sell their jewels under the table so they can establish their own funds.  Charis is already the scandal of the ton due to her independent streak, and the truth about her father and mother’s business overseas drops an even larger number of jaws.  But right now, she’s stuck in England until her father is healthy again.

Since she’s a most unsuitable bride for Gregory and he is a most unsuitable husband for her, they agree to a friendship, and he asks her to help him vet the latest debutantes to help him select a bride.  Surely this won’t lead them deeper into love, will it?

It’s a romance novel – you know how it’s gonna go.  The Explorer Baroness has some nice moments, and I liked Charis’ independence a great deal, especially how determined she is to live the kind of life she wants.

Greg, too, is a good man trying to do his best and keep on an even keel with his family, society and his own needs.  When he chooses to make a sacrifice for Charis it’s deeply felt.

The romance between Charis and Gregory is warm and filled with yearning, and paces itself beautifully.  I loved watching them figure out how to strike a balance between freedom and commitment.  They have to battle back what they think they know about people they love.

I loved to visit the Lattimars once more, with Greg’s mom popping to particularly vibrant life this time out.

And yet there’s an unfortunate stain of exotification running throughout the book that sometimes kerns toward disquieting.  Charis is fully white, but becomes yet another example of that hoary romancelandia cliché, the white woman who is familiar with harems.  The rest of the cultural details involved are so vibrant that this really didn’t need to be a plot point in the novel.  Too bad that it is.

But even docking The Explorer Baroness slightly in the originality department results in a solid B grade.  Fans of the series will likely embrace it warmly.

Buy it at Amazon or your local independent retailer

Visit our Amazon Storefront

Reviewed by Lisa Fernandes

Grade: B

Book Type: Historical Romance

Sensuality: Subtle

Review Date: 25/10/21

Publication Date: 10/2021

Recent Comments …

  1. excellent book: interesting, funny dialogs, deep understanding of each character, interesting secondary characters, and also sexy.

Lisa Fernandes is a writer, reviewer and recapper who lives somewhere on the East Coast. Formerly employed by Firefox.org and Next Projection, she also currently contributes to Women Write About Comics. Read her blog at http://thatbouviergirl.blogspot.com/, follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/thatbouviergirl or contribute to her Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/MissyvsEvilDead or her Ko-Fi at ko-fi.com/missmelbouvier

guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments