November 20, 2024

#TBRChallenge 2024: Parting Gifts

The Book: Parting Gifts by Lorraine Heath

The Particulars: Historical romance, Berkley Jove, 1994, Out of print - sort of. Available digital-only, 2010 Harpercollins reprint. Fun fact: this is Heath's second published book.

Why Was It In Wendy's TBR?: When I started reading romance back when dinosaurs roamed the Earth, ebooks weren't a thing, and the only way you could find old, out of print romances was by scouring used bookstores or the Internet. This was one of my white whales. Heath's early westerns tended to be recommended a lot in those days and were hard to find, but I somehow got my hands on a used copy and proceeded to keep it in my TBR for probably 20 years because that's just the kind of sick person that I am.

The Review: I have no idea what I thought of this story. The plot is straight-up early 1990s WTF-ery but damn if the execution doesn't mostly work even as I was cringing in parts. A lot of readers I know love this book and I'm not saying they're wrong - but it is rather eyebrow raising in parts.  Expect some spoilers folks. 

Maddie Sherwood has hit the end of the line. Her father and brother dead, she has traded or sold everything she has of value (meager as it was) and the only thing left is her body. Hungry, cold, and desperate, she goes into a well-known brothel and the madam quickly starts the bidding for who will get to deflower the virgin. Almost immediately a bid of $1000 is entered and that seals the deal. The winner is Charles Lawson and impotent from an accident, he doesn't want to bed Maddie, he wants to marry her. His wife, the love of his life died in childbirth. Charles himself has a terminal illness and three young children, who he doesn't want to grow up without a mother. Does he tell Maddie this? Well partly. He leaves out the part about him dying (our first Big Secret). With no other options, other than the brothel, Maddie says yes to Charles. They quickly marry and make the trip from Fort Worth to Waco.

Charles owns a stagecoach stop / inn, which is where he, his three children and his older brother Jesse live.  Jesse is a former Texas Ranger and is gobsmacked when Charles comes home married to a stranger. He's even more put out that he's attracted to her himself even though his lawman instincts tell him something is rotten in Denmark. The attraction is mutual, with both Jesse and Maddie rubbing each other the wrong way, until over time feelings grow as Charles' time on this Earth slowly ebbs away.

So hey, like I did, you're probably thinking that Charles dies within the first 50 pages and the rest of the 200+ pages are spent on building the love story between Jesse and Maddie. Narrator: Well, you would be dead wrong. Folks Charles LIVES for the majority of this book. It's only in the last few chapters when he finally pushes up daisies - so readers are regaled with Jesse and Maddie falling in love while she's married. MARRIED TO THE HERO'S BROTHER!

The author tap dances around this by having Charles still being desperately in love with his dead wife. Also, he's impotent so can't bone the heroine, but they do spoon and sleep in the same bed. Charles is also not a terrible person. He's desperately, hopelessly nice. He was honestly my favorite part of the story until he slips into Gary Stu Martyrdom territory in the final chapters. The friendship between Maddie and Charles is really well developed and frankly not the sort of thing we see a lot in romance.

Hot mess original cover
But that's not the romance. Jesse, Charles and a long-lost sister have very interesting backstory that involves them being separated as children, split up after their parents die. This, along with Jesse's time in the Army (he fought for the Union during the Civil War) have made him the man he is - a very black and white, suspicious character who protects those he loves. Naturally he doesn't trust Maddie a lick, which ends up being a smart move since about 30% in a bomb goes off and we find out Maddie has a Big Secret. Literally it's just dropped in. No foreshadowing, no nothing. Anyway, she's tight-lipped about it and says her past "won't hurt the children" and you know she's lying through her teeth.

Kisses happen as do declarations of feelings ALL WHILE CHARLES IS STILL ALIVE mind you, but consummation doesn't happen until the final chapter. Which honestly, even with good chemistry between the couple I largely skimmed.

Y'all, it's skeevy in that special way 1990s romances could be skeevy. So why do so many readers gush and love this story?  Even with all the skeevyness, Heath executes her story well. The characters are well-developed, interesting, and while I felt that Maddie's Big Secret could have been foreshadowed better in the early chapters, it's compelling. I had to keep reading.  Also, damn my black soul, I cried. When Charles nears the end I got choked up and leaked out tears. Hey, maybe I'm not completely dead inside after all?

So where does that leave us? Lord, I have no clue. It's interesting, it made me cry, but dude - she's married while she and her brother-in-law are both getting mutual pants-feelings for each other. Look, Charles is dying, he's in love with his dead wife, he's not blind, he's not even upset about it - but it's still skeevy. I said what I said.

But I cried. Over a book. And frankly that usually only happens once or twice every year.  This is definitely a Wendy review one should read and not just skip to the final grade, because Lord even knows what I'm doing anymore.

Final Grade = B-

Note: At the time of this posting, this book was available via Kindle Unlimited.

2 comments:

S. said...

I've read this book in 2015 and liked it. I agree with pretty much everything you say but, yes, it was still emotional as many books with similar plots aren't. ;)

Jill said...

My mother had the cover with the copy that looked like a quilt. I remember staring at it on the book shelf and contemplating it, but it sounded sad and maybe "Christian" (which was not my mom's thing, so I don't know why I thought that) and I was deeply in my Jayne Ann Krentz/Nora Roberts phase and didn't read a lot of historical.
I don't know if I'd like it now, but just hearing the summary and seeing that cover makes me feel like I'm a teenager in my parents den, looking at the bookshelf.