Amazon discontinued the ability to create images using their SiteStripe feature and in their infinite wisdom broke all previously created images on 12/31/23. Many blogs used this feature, including this one. Expect my archives to be a hot mess of broken book cover images until I can slowly comb through 20 years of archives to make corrections.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Review: Rake With A Frozen Heart

Long-time readers of this blog will remember a period where I was beyond burnt out on the Regency era.  Crispy.  Toasty.  And not in a good way.  My solution to this burn-out was to completely avoid the setting for about three years.  Turns out, that was the best medicine - because now that I'm "over" my burn-out, I find myself capable of being charmed by the setting, when it's done well.  Case in point, Rake With A Frozen Heart by Marguerite Kaye.  A mouthful of a title, and a book that is not without issues, but one that I enjoyed all the same.

Rafe St. Alban, Earl of Pentland, is out for a morning ride at his country estate when he comes across a woman lying in a ditch.  This is an added complication he doesn't need, or want, in his life, but he can't very well leave the poor girl just lying there - especially when she's soaked from dirty ditch water and knocked unconscious. 

Henrietta Markham is more than a little confused to wake up in a strange bed.  Once she finds out she's in the bed of the notorious Earl of Pentland, she's horrified.  The man is a notorious rake, and if there is one thing her mama warned her about growing up, it was rakes!  A governess for Rafe's closest country neighbor, the details slowly begin to return to Henrietta's foggy mind.  She interrupted a housebreaker and was conked over the head by the man!  She thanks Rafe for his rescue, and is merrily on her way back to her rather, shrewish, employer.  Sadly though, Henrietta's troubles are not over.  She's quickly accused of theft!  With a Bow Street Runner breathing down her neck, Henrietta takes off, and lands right back into the arms of Rafe - who is determined to help her out of the mess.

The first few chapters are this story are really delightful, full of dialogue that had me laughing out loud on my dinner break at work.  Henrietta is extremely forthright, a girl incapable of guile.  She's a straight-shooter, and lacks any sort of filter - which means she only tells the truth, whether people want to hear it or not.  Rafe is a widower, a man whose first marriage was such an epic disaster he has vowed never to marry again.  However he cannot help but be charmed by Henrietta.  The girl is quite unlike anyone he has ever met before, and he cannot stand the idea of her taking the fall for something she obviously did not do.  Even as cynical as he is, he knows her brand of naivety, innocence, and wholesomeness is no act - so he agrees to use some of his more unsavory connections to help find her mysterious housebreaker.  Naturally this means they're going to have to spend some time together, what with Bow Street looking for her, until the matter is sorted out.

Once Rafe and Henrietta are paired up, and working to solve the mystery, is when this story begins to lag for me.  The pacing of the middle portion of the story really begins to slag off, and while I continued to like the dialogue between the pair, the sense of urgency to the conflict almost grinds to a halt.  However, things do pick up in the second half, with the mystery of the housebreaker being mostly dealt with, and Henrietta spending some time out in society.  This is also the portion of the book where all the pieces of Rafe's past fall into place.  Why is he so cynical?  Exactly what happened with his first marriage that has led him to continually punish himself? 

I enjoyed this story, not only for the dialogue and characters, but also for the interesting mix of romp meets angst.  Because truly, that's what we have here.  The story, the conflict, the pairing of two opposites has "romp" written all over it.  However with Rafe's baggage, the author infuses a fair amount of angst.  Yes, the pacing lags in spots, but the characters are engaging and the sensuality sizzles.  A nice read that I enjoyed over the course of a couple of sittings.

Final Grade = B

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I've liked other books by this author. I think I want to read this one. Thanks!

nath said...

A B for a regency historical is quite an endorsement from you, Wendy :) Glad you enjoyed it. I really like the cover of this book!

It seems to me this book could have done without the "mystery." I'm kind of annoyed at others to always try to incorporate mysteries and intrigues. Sometimes, you really don't need any.

Wendy said...

Sonomalass: This was my third full-length read by this author. 2 B's and one "meh" C. So good track record so far!

Nath: The mystery succeeds in throwing our couple together, I just feel it went on a little too long here. I think she probably could have dumped about 50 pages out of the middle section and the book wouldn't have suffered for it.

Cheryl St.John said...

I liked this story, too. The cover sold me first.

Wendy said...

Cheryl: I love this cover! Although now I'm wishing hunky cover models would give me cool looking necklaces.....