Tags: , , , , , , ,

Liviania’s retro review of Lord of Scoundrels by Loretta Chase
Historical romance released by Avon 1 Jan 1995, reprinted Dec 2007

While I’ve now been reading romances steadily for two years, I’m still new to the genre and catching up on the classics.  I read and enjoyed Loretta Chase’s Your Scandalous Ways, and I’ve seen countless recommendations for Lord of Scoundrels and Mr. Impossible and I recently picked up both for cheap.  Due to the “Beauty and the Beast” theme (I love fairytales), I started with Lord of Scoundrels.

Book CoverChase, smartly, begins by recounting the Marquess of Dain’s past.  Too often authors draw out revealing the trauma that turned the hero into a jerkass.  This mainly leads to the reason seeming smaller than it actually is and thus extra frustration with the hero’s behavior.  The opening contextualized Dain’s protracted childhood.  He can still be frustrating, but his character remains coherent and makes sense.

Luckily he runs into Jessica Trent, an aging beauty who won’t put up with his nonsense.  Her brother Bertie Trent is pretty close to being the dullest tool in the shed.  His idolization of Dain is leading him toward the poorhouse, and Jessica prefers to live comfortably on her fortune (earned in trade) rather than using it to continually pay his debts.  Thus, she goes after Dain.

I enjoyed their verbal battles.  I also enjoyed Jessica pushing Dain towards adulthood and responsibility.  I was, however, puzzled by a couple of dropped plot points.  At the beginning Jessica talks of setting up her own store, but after the opening her skill at finding antiques remains mostly forgotten.  Likewise,  Dain’s friends Beaumont and Vawtry remain important to the plot until the end, but Esmond disappears without a trace.  (Does the Beaumont, Esmond, Beaumont’s wife triangle reappear in another of Chase’s books?)

I can see why Lord of Scoundrels continually tops favorites lists: Jessica.  She’s intelligent and feisty.  Between this and His at Night by Sherry Thomas, I am going to demand that all historical heroines beat a man half to death during the course of the novel.  It’s clearly a good sign.  Many romances survive on the hero’s appeal, but Lord of Scoundrels stands out by relying on the heroine’s strength.  (I like Dain, as some appear not to, but he’s clearly playing second fiddle to Jess.)

Now I’m happily moving on to Mr. Impossible, hoping that it’s as good as Your Scandalous Ways and Lord of Scoundrels.  I do wonder: what are the other must reads in Chase’s backlist?  Also, what classic romances should I read next?

Livianias iconGrade: B

Summary:
They call him many names but Angelic isn’t one of them…
Sebastian Ballister, the notorious Marquess of Dain, is big, bad, and dangerous to know. No respectable woman would have anything to do with the “Bane and Blight of the Ballisters”–and he wants nothing to do with respectable women. He’s determined to continue doing what he does best–sin and sin again–and all that’s going swimmingly, thank you…until the day a shop door opens and she walks in.

She’s too intelligent to fall for the worst man in the world…
Jessica Trent is a determined young woman, and she’s going to drag her imbecile brother off the road to ruin, no matter what it takes. If saving him–and with him, her family and future–means taking on the devil himself, she won’t back down. The trouble is, the devil in question is so shockingly irresistible, and the person who needs the most saving is–herself!
Read an excerpt here.