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PhantasmagoriaBevQB‘s review of Phantasmagoria by Madelynne Ellis
Historical erotic romance released by Virgin Black Lace 29 Apr 08

Chosen to kick off the 15th Anniversary celebration of Virgin Black Lace, this surprising sequel to A Gentleman’s Wager (reviewed here) is an emotionally wrenching, dark journey through the death of a relationship. Phantasmagoria isn’t a book that one could say they “liked” or “loved” because those words just would never apply to this haunting story. It’s raw, cruel, complex, often crude, and Madelynne Ellis doesn’t spare us by allowing us to flinch away from all the manifestations of the characters’ pain.

Warning: mild spoilers ahead

Set in Georgian period London three years after Vaughan, Lucerne and Bella left North Yorkshire, we find the threesome stagnating under the constant rounds of socializing and debauchery in the city. Hoping to reinvigorate the relationship, Vaughan secretly makes plans to manipulate them all away from town and devises a gothic All Hallow’s Eve celebration, a Phantasmagoria, at his family seat in Pennerly, near the Welsh borders (imagine creating a Haunted House when your house happens to be a castle). He then clandestinely flees London fully expecting the mystery of his disappearance to lure Lucerne and Bella to follow him.

Not only do Vaughan’s house party plans go awry, but they are not the only phantasmagoria [noun: an illusion of perceiving something that does not really exist] in the book. Like the parable of the blind men and the elephant, each of the main characters perceives their relationship in a completely different, but incomplete and/or erroneous way. These and other phantasms haunt the characters throughout the book.

  • As we already know from A Gentleman’s Wager, Vaughan’s usual method of dealing with his emotional pain is to lash out in cruelty towards others, particularly Bella. I wanted to shake him and tell him to stop debasing her, himself, and what they had together. He is haunted by the phantasms of what his life with Lucerne would have been like had Bella not appeared. In a country where homosexuality was an automatic death sentence, would they still have been together? What if he had never fled London? What if Lucerne had followed him? What if he had never let himself care at all?
  • The phantasm of “What if” haunts Bella also. What if Vaughan had not been in the picture? Would she and Lucerne have been married, possibly with a child or two? What if they had never left North Yorkshire for a life in London? What if Vaughan had never left? What if she didn’t now know what she found out before she fled London, and Lucerne, to find Vaughan?

Throughout most of this book, I wanted Bella to walk away from BOTH of the men. I felt she deserved better and was angry on her behalf. In fact, when she receives another offer, I found myself hoping she would take it and never look back. Then I finally realized that, though it’s not the type of relationship I would want for myself, Bella didn’t love Lucerne and Vaughan IN SPITE of the way they treated her, she loved them BECAUSE of their treatment. No matter how vile Vaughan was to her, she CRAVED more of it.

  • And Lucerne? I spent most the book angry with him. How could he do that? Why was he ruining everything? But then he told us his view of the relationship and immediately garnered my sympathy. Oh, I still didn’t approve of what he did, but the “why” of his actions broke my heart for him.

I can’t tell you how many times I wanted to stop reading this book, to put it away and never look at it again. No, not because it was a DNF book, but because I didn’t want it to happen, I didn’t want to go on that painful emotional journey with them. As curious as I’ve been about their lives after AGW, once I started reading Phantasmagoria, I wanted to go back and keep them forever frozen in that magical moment at the end of AGW.

But instead the author forced me to admit that people are not static, their environment changes, their circumstances change, THEY change, and sometimes that means that what they had with each other changes detrimentally. Madelynne Ellis made me feel their heart wrenching pain right along with them, no matter how difficult it was to watch.

Saying that Phantasmagoria ends with an HEA would be misleading, but Ellis does gives us a bittersweet-tinged hope for the future; a possibility of something new rising out of the ashes of the relationship. She also introduces us to a whole new cast of engaging secondary characters, some of whom will be getting their own stories before Ellis returns to the original threesome to finish their story.

Phantasmagoria could certainly be read as a standalone, but the reader’s emotional involvement will be impacted far more if A Gentleman’s Wager is read first. And really, if you read my glowing homage to AGW, you know that it’s one of my most beloved books and reading it would scarcely be a hardship.

bevs-standard-icon-angel_130.jpgGrade: A

Summary:

     1800 – Three years after she escaped to London with her bisexual lovers, Bella Rushdale wakes one morning to find their delicate menage a trois about to shatter. Vaughan, Marquis of Pennerley has left abruptly and without explanation. Determined to reclaim him and preserve their relationship, Bella pursues him to his family seat on the Welsh Border, where she finds herself embroiled in his preparations for a diabolical gothic celebration on All Hallows Eve – a phantasmagoria. Among the shadows and phantoms, Bella and her lovers will discover shocking truths about each other.

     Read an excerpt.


Other books in this series:

A Gentleman's Wager Read Bev’s review.

Read the short story Indiscretions which takes place between A Gentleman’s Wager and Phantasmagoria.

In addition to her own blog, Madelynne is also a regular on the Black Lace authors’ group blog, Lust Bites. Just be warned that the discussions by that bunch of bawdy Brits aren’t always work safe.

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CONTEST!  Madelynne will be sending some Lucky Duckie a SIGNED copy of A Gentleman’s Wager AND Phantasmagoria! Winner will be chosen from comments on this post or on Bev’s interview with Madelynne over here.

Keep in mind that these are erotic historical romances containing m/m, m/f/m, m/m/f, and m/f scenes. Each book also contains a brief f/f scene. So, if that doesn’t trip your trigger, or you are under 18, feel free to leave a comment or question, but please indicate you don’t want to be entered in the drawing.

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Read more from Bev at Cubie’s Confections.