My rating: 4 of 5 stars
3.5 stars
I received this book for free, this does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review
She could not abandon him again.
After left for dead on the battlefield of Waterloo and then rescued by a couple, a chance is seized and Viola Carroll finally gets to live her life in truth. A freedom that comes with cost, while her immediate family of brother and sister-in-law accept and welcome her back into their home, trading Viscount for paid companion, Viola feels she must abandon her previous relationships. But when word reaches Louise (sister-in-law) and she shares with Viola how much the Duke of Gracewood, Viola's past bestfriend, is struggling with not only her loss but the emotional impacts of war, Viola can't help but want to go to him.
Wanting so terribly to be seen, and terrified of what it might mean if she was.
At over four hundred pages, A Lady for a Duke was emotionally hitting but kept out of the doldrums with it's touches of love and lightness. The beginning focused on Viola and the emotional journey she had been on since surviving Waterloo. How she knows she made the right decision but also getting hit with the costs. Louise was that romance genre meddling character that would make you want to strangle her in real life but love to see her pushing to get things done in the story. The first half had Viola and then Justin (Duke of Gracewood) a lot in their heads as they're sorting through their emotions. I don't mind some poetic turn of phrases (She would shine like a star in a room full of shadows.) but towards the end of the four hundred pages, I started to even feel there was some overwritten feels to this.
He wanted to kiss her.
As I said, the first half is more of Viola's journey, her going to Justin's to try and pull him out of his addiction to laudanum and grief, while also Louise is trying to convince Justin's sister Miranda that it's ok to go have a season in London and not feel responsible for Justin. There's some slow falling in love with Viola from Justin and then we get, probably the most emotional scene, when Viola feels like it's a lie to not reveal to Justin that she is his bestfriend and did survive the war. This is around the halfway point and then reader's get a better look at Justin as we get more into his head and how he's feeling.
There were moments when he might almost have laughed at the absurdity of it. The absurdity and the impossibility. And the simplicity. Of course she was familiar. She was---
She was his oldest friend.
Who he had never truly known.
The second half moves to London so Miranda can have her season and we get Justin eventually following and some trying to dance around the attraction from Viola and wanting to meet it head on from Justin. Each of their wants and fears felt real and with the gradual softening and learning to trust that she can have a relationship with Justin, we get some side family focusing. This kind of reminded me of a Grace Burrowes, where the central romance has focus but it's shown in concert with family and friends lives. Viola's brother's family held a lot of focus in the first half and then the second half moves to drama with Miranda and the dangers of being popular on the marriage market, a jealous debutante and bored looking to hurt Duke.
“But if you think I came here for him, you are wrong. I am here for you. I am here for Viola Carroll.”
Around seventy percent the story brought back the focus on the romance and we get an open door scene between Viola and Justin and from there Viola trusts more in how much of a relationship she can have with Justin. The ending gave, in my opinion, a not needed danger moment for Miranda that I felt could have been cut as it felt like a going through the motions third act drama.
It was the Duke of Gracewood and Viola Carroll.
And they were dancing.
This was emotional but with lightness and love, but did feel overly long and overly written with some flowery turn of phrases. It felt more of a complete in the characters' world story but while I enjoy a slow burn, I missed more of a continuous spotlight on the main couple. If you like snappy, this wouldn't be for you but if you're into delving in and slow burning (I just managed to keep my head above the last 100pgs water), this hits those emotional notes.
“What of society?”
He shrugged. “What of it? The matrons and masters of the ton have nothing we want, while the things that they want---wealth and power and influence and pedigree---I already possess in abundance. It is for them to live up to our standards. Not the contrary.”
I am going to give this one a pass; several trans women I follow on social media were unhappy about it, for various reasons; your review, while not touching on those, doesn't give me any reason to check it out myself.
ReplyDeleteI read a couple reviews on GRs but I don't think I dipped below 3 stars, I'm going to have to check out some 1 and 2s to see what others were saying. I can't really speak to the representation in this, not my lane, there was dead-naming a few times (CW at beginning of book about this), but I thought it stayed respectful of the emotions it was exploring.
DeleteI'm going to search for some reviews but do you remember any of the reasons that were discussed?
I am sorry, I don't remember specifics; the gist is that there were a number of threads (on twitter) about how more space is given to trans stories not written by trans women, and this title was brought up a few times, with negative connotations, as an example of people who aren't trans women writing trans women's stories.
DeleteI found a Twitter thread from a trans woman stating her issues as she read the book and a couple reviews on GRs to give me some feelings, thoughts, and opinions.
DeleteThanks for relaying what you did remember!
Glad I could help in any way.
Delete