Velvet Touch

TEST

Catherine Archer, author of this reviewer’s favorite medieval, Velvet Bond, has written a dreamy sequel. The oddest sensation enveloped me when reading this book – it was as though I was in a dream-state, wrapped in a velvet-smooth, creamy cocoon.

A minor character in her previous work, Sir Stephen Clayburn, emerges boldly in Velvet Touch. His story is told in shimmering colors and sensual imagery. This is not the story of a tortured hero, although his mission will surely torture him and test the values he holds dear. This hero is magnificent, strong, handsome, quick-witted, courageous, and giving. The author’s affection for this man is clear – he is the ultimate man.

Lady Fellis Grayson, Sir Stephen’s heroine, is much more the tortured soul in this story. Though beautiful, intelligent and loving, she is regarded by her people as an outcast because she was born with a club foot. Raised by a terribly misguided mother, she has grown to adulthood without any sense of self. Taught never to think about herself or her own needs, she is untouchable and untouched.

Sir Stephen cannot believe when he is introduced to the drab, faded, and shabbily clothed Lady Fellis that she is the luscious, naked wood nymph he earlier spied bathing in a hidden forest stream. When in the presence of others, she is cloaked by a gray demeanor, having accepted the lot in life her mother believes she must have – subservient, faded, and cloistered.

Sir Stephen is sent by the king to arrange a marriage between Lady Fellis and a bordering Welsh clan leader. His job is to arrange the marriage and secure the peace. Lady Fellis will do the honorable thing. Whether cloistered in a convent or married to a man for political purposes, she accepts her lot in life and will do her duty.

Their good intentions are abraded by their strong attraction to one another. They must struggle, first against their feelings, and then, for their love. Sir Stephen’s feelings for Lady Fellis allow her to emerge from her cocoon, like a vividly colored butterfly, as she is transformed into a passionate, courageous woman, strong enough to fight for her destiny.

Sir Stephen changes the lives of all those around him, not just his Lady. He affects her mother, her parent’s marriage, then the Welsh clan leader. As this happens, even Sir Stephen is changed – loving his true love makes him all the more perfect. Alas, this book is not perfect. The Midas touch possessed by the hero is truly too good to be true. A climactic fight scene is won in nearly super-hero fashion. Lady Fellis’ mother changes too quickly from pious shrew to loving wife and mother. The Welshman sets aside his suspicions too easily and believes Sir Stephen too readily.

Still, the author has fashioned a fairy tale with incredibly lyrical prose and tactile, sensual imagery. Nearly every description is filled with such luminosity and beautiful language that it is easy to over- look the too-quick resolution of age-old problems. Like a wonderful dream or the slow-motion memory of a romp in a meadow, this book evokes a sense of warmth and love. Slowly paced but quickly read, reading Velvet Touch is like settling down on a cold winter’s night at a fire with a loaf of bread, a jug of wine, and thou.

Reviewed by Laurie Likes Books

Grade: B-

Book Type: Medieval Romance

Sensuality: Warm

Review Date: 01/05/96

Publication Date: 1996

Review Tags: disability

Recent Comments …

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

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