oyceter: Stack of books with text "mmm... books!" (mmm books)
For anyone picking this up, the back cover copy LIES! It makes the book sound much darker and angstier than it actually is, even though it does indeed contain a female swordfighter with stigmata and amnesia and a soldier for a king in exile.

Jack Marstone finds Catherine de la Fer in an alley and rescues her, only to discover that she doesn't remember who she is or how she got there. She convinces him to teach her to swordfight, and I think he decides to take her on in order to get closer to her family or to be rewarded or something. Amazingly, there are nearly no misunderstandings!

Sadly, I read this a few months ago and no longer remember most of the details, so most of the above could be very wrong.

Mostly I remember liking how unexpectedly sweet the romance was, given the plot description (Harbaugh is very good at sweet). Like Harbaugh's Night Fire, I also liked the inclusion of religion in the book, given the time period, although I rolled my eyes at all the random French.

In conclusion: cute, less dark than the supernatural elements and the plot would make you think, and likeable, albeit not terribly memorable.

Links:
- [livejournal.com profile] rachelmanija's review
oyceter: Stack of books with text "mmm... books!" (mmm books)
This is a trilogy of books centered around Psyche Hathaway, who grew up with Eros as her not-so-imaginary best friend. She calls him "Harry" due to mispronouncing "Eros" as a child, and together, they wreak havoc and sometimes romance in the love lives of the Hathaway siblings.

Cupid's Mistake - Cassandra Hathaway is a bluestocking invested in improving the lives of runaway boys. Lord Blytheland has sworn to never fall in love with someone like his wife again: she was a bluestocking whose radical notions about love led her to cheat on him and then die birthing another man's child.

Harbaugh notes on her website that she tried cramming in every single Regency stereotype possible, and oh yes, she does. I don't think she quite succeeds in making the book transcend the stereotypes; rather, it's sweet and cute enough that I can ignore the stereotypes. Psyche and Eros are rather annoying in this one, and I say this despite my fondness for annoying younger sisters. I also wanted more about the effects of Eros' arrows on people, which Harbaugh does address, but not quite to my satisfaction as far as I remember (I read this a few months ago).

Cupid's Darts - Kenneth Hathaway has just come home from war, and the only thing that's sustained him is the memory of his sweetheart Aimee Mattingly. But thanks to an arrow gone wrong, he seems more in love with her portrait and her memory than with the woman herself.

Psyche's a teenager in this one, which makes her a little less annoying, and I was very amused by the scene of random dart shooting in the midst of Almack's. Harbaugh also tackles the subjects of over-idealizing and PTSD in this book, although as usual, her touch is very light. Kenneth does have a lot of angst, but it doesn't show much in the book, and I especially like Aimee's growing frustration with his refusal to see who she actually is, as opposed to who he wants her to be.

Cupid's Kiss - The Greek gods are fading from this earth, and soon they'll disappear, unless Eros can find the reincarnation of his long-lost wife Psyche.

Psyche and Harry/Eros' book! Unsurprisingly, I liked this best of the bunch, probably because Harbaugh didn't have to cram the entire romance into 200 or so pages, thanks to having room in the previous two books to develop Psyche and Harry's relationship. There are no silly misunderstandings in this; Harry and Psyche talk fairly openly about the possibility of her being the reincarnation of Psyche, along with other issues. And as I'm very fond of friendship-turned-romance stories, I liked this a lot. I also liked the side plot regarding Artemis and her broken heart much more than I had anticipated. There's a fair amount of angst in here, but most of it understated and quickly resolved, and my favorite parts are probably how things are resolved without the characters acting stupid.

I do wish there had been a little more about Psyche getting used to the idea of being a reincarnation, not just Psyche Hathaway, though.



Overall, the three books are fairly slight but cute and non-offending, and I am very fond of the last book.
oyceter: Stack of books with text "mmm... books!" (mmm books)
This is the first book in the de la Fer series. I found Harbaugh when [personal profile] coffeeandink re-posted her old romance recs list; I hadn't realized prior to that that Harbaugh was POC. I'd read one of her Regencies back in high school (The Vampire Viscount) and remember thinking that there was not enough angst and brooding and alpha male posturing.

Oh younger self. It's too bad you didn't find Twilight.

Night Fires is set during the French Revolution and is very much influenced by The Scarlet Pimpernel; since my younger self read Baroness Orczy back in eighth grade and desperately loved it, I do not find this to be a problem. However, as with many French Revolution portrayals, this book is highly sympathetic toward the aristocrats.

Simone de la Fer is an outcast from her family, having been turned into a vampire in a rather scandalous manner. She returns to find them all dead and kills all the killers. As a way to repent, she vows to go after evil-doers and to take no more lives, and does so as a hunchback wrapped in rags calling herself "La Flamme." As one does!

Michael Corday is a British spy. They meet and distrust each other and then decide to work together. I think there is something involved about uncovering a mole in the British spy ring and/or rescuing some people from a Parisian prison. Quite honestly, I have no idea.

The prose is not particularly wonderful; there were definitely too many random French phrases for me. I also dislike the notion that both Michael and Simone think she is strong, but that most women are not. I am not sure if we are supposed to agree with them or not. Given that the same sentiment is in Harbaugh's other de la Fer book, I have no idea.

What I did enjoy about this book was the reversal of the usual paranormal vampire tropes. Simone is afraid to sleep with Michael, yes, but mostly because she is afraid she will succumb and bite him. She's also not a timid virgin, and moreover, she has had sex without love and the book does not really condemn her for it.

There's also a strong religious presence throughout, which I found realistic and actually rather interesting, given that many historical romances don't imbue their protagonists' lives with religion. Here, it's something that is fairly central to Simone's character, despite her vampire-ness.

Still, I have to agree with younger self a bit... I wanted more angst and UST-full neck gazing and licking, though I was pleased to have less alpha-male-ness. I'm afraid Vampire Knight may have spoiled me a bit for all following vampire things.

Profile

oyceter: teruterubouzu default icon (Default)
Oyceter

March 2021

S M T W T F S
 123456
78910 111213
1415 1617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Most Popular Tags

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags