Friday, 22 January 2010

Wicked All Day by Liz Carlyle




FOUR STARS

I have not read any historical romance from Liz Carlyle before, only her contribution to Big Guns Out of Uniform (a modern romance anthology) which admittedly was well written. So I thought I'd give this book a whirl. It's set in London and Sussex (England).

Goodreads:

New York Times bestselling author Liz Carlyle continues her enthralling historical series with the story of an impetuous, illegitimate beauty and the forbidding nobleman who protects her -- while fighting an obsession to possess her....

Miss Zoë Armstrong is beautiful, charming, rich -- and utterly unmarriageable. So, while she may be the ton's most sparkling diamond, her choice of husbands looks more like a list of London's most unsavory fortune hunters. Since a true-love marriage seems impossible, Zoë has accepted -- no, embraced -- her role as society's most incomparable flirt and mischiefmaker...until in one reckless, vulnerable moment, her future is shattered.

Stuart Rowland, the brooding Marquess of Mercer, has been part of Zoë's extended family since she was a child. As dark and cynical as Zoë is lively, Mercer has always known they would be the worst possible match...until his scapegrace brother Robert does the unthinkable, and winds up betrothed to Zoë. Now, secluded on Mercer's vast estate to escape a looming scandal and the ton's prying eyes, Zoë and Mercer may find that a dark obsession has become a tempestuous passion that can no longer be denied....


My review:

I thought all the characters were well drawn - which I suppose is only to be expected when the author has previously written whole novels for these characters (e.g. A Woman Scorned featured Mercer's mother's romance, and My False Heart featured Zoe's father's!).

I was a little upset by this author's interpretation of a Scottish accent - I am typing from Glasgow, so I think I have the credentials to comment.

Overall, the author's ability to sweep her readers up in her world has not altered from that small novella she wrote all those years ago. I enjoyed reading this book, and indeed was compelled to read through until 5AM.

I guess the thing that I missed most (on my "wish a book had included this" hit list) was more scenes from the character's teen years - we saw one scene at the very beginning of the book, when Zoe was around five years old, and were told in character's speech about various escapades, in a sentence or so's length, but I think the connection and history of the characters could have deepened. Their relationship would have been more fascinating still for it.

Liz Carlyle's characters seem to grow as the novel progresses and their journeys are plausible and interesting. Their romance was worth reading about, but it wasn't legendary. Very few books I have every read have achieved the latter though. Well done Ms Carlyle, fabulous book!

I am planning on reading The Devil You Know, or My False Heart, next, as these are the novels I was most intrigued by from the synopses on Ms Carlyle's website:

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