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Evangeline Ames has rented a country cottage far from the London streets where she was recently attacked. Fascinated by the paranormal energy of nearby Crystal
Gardens, she finds pleasure in sneaking past the wall to explore the grounds. And when her life is threatened again, she instinctively goes to the gardens for safety.

Lucas Sebastian has never been one to ignore a lady in danger, even if she is trespassing on his property. Quickly disposing of her would-be assassin, he insists they keep the matter private. There are rumors enough already, about treasure buried under his garden, and occult botanical experiments performed by his uncle—who died of mysterious causes. With Evangeline’s skill for detection, and Lucas’s sense of the criminal mind, they soon discover that they have a common enemy. And as the energy emanating from Crystal Gardens intensifies, they realize that to survive they must unearth what has been buried for too long.

345 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 1, 2012

899 people are currently reading
4072 people want to read

About the author

Amanda Quick

93 books5,497 followers
Pseudonym of Jayne Ann Krentz

The author of over 40 consecutive New York Times bestsellers, JAYNE ANN KRENTZ writes romantic-suspense, often with a psychic and paranormal twist, in three different worlds: Contemporary (as Jayne Ann Krentz), historical (as Amanda Quick) and futuristic (as Jayne Castle). There are over 30 million copies of her books in print.

She earned a B.A. in History from the University of California at Santa Cruz and went on to obtain a Masters degree in Library Science from San Jose State University in California. Before she began writing full time she worked as a librarian in both academic and corporate libraries.

Ms. Krentz is married and lives with her husband, Frank, in Seattle, Washington.


Pseudonym(s):
Jayne Ann Krentz
Jayne Castle
Stephanie James
Jayne Bentley
Jayne Taylor
Amanda Glass

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 702 reviews
Profile Image for Obsidian.
3,239 reviews1,141 followers
January 10, 2022
I stopped reading Quick's books a few years back. When she started focusing on paranormal and then noir books I just lost interest. I absolutely love her historical romance novels though although some are unintentionally funny to me now. Crystal Gardens is the first book in a trilogy focusing on paranormal romance. I wish I could say that this book was wonderful. But honestly it dragged and hearing/reading about people talking about their physic abilities kept making me snicker. I was very interested in the ladies of lantern street, but was less interested in the supernatural aspects of this book. And this is coming from someone who loves magical realism books. I just think that nothing made a lot of sense and I never really did like the romance between Evangeline and Lucas.

"Crystal Gardens" follows Evangeline Ames who has rented a cottage on the grounds of the Crystal Gardens. Evangeline likes the physic energy she feels around the place (look this book talks about that a lot, fair warning). When she is awoken by someone breaking into her cottage and threatening her, she runs for the gardens and runs into the new owner of the estate, Lucas Sebastian. Though she is reluctant, Evangeline eventually takes Lucas into her confidence about what caused her to leave London and what she and her two friends do in London.

I really did like the character of Evangeline. I did have to sigh about her and her two "bluestocking" friends thinking that having an affair would just be fine and dandy. I don't know. Back then if someone had found out about it, a woman could be ruined. I always read historical romances where the heroine is all, yes an affair, to just feel a bit of sync of things. But usually the hero uses this to engage himself to the heroine cause he's decided only she will do for him. Eh. It works sometimes.

The mystery of who is trying to harm Evangeline takes a weird backseat though. Instead this book focuses on the mystery of the garden, magical pools, another killing, etc. It just had too much in it. And there was a total letdown when the person behind wanting Evangeline murdered is found out and done away with in like 5 seconds.

I usually judge the romance on the two main leads, I liked Evangeline fine, but Lucas was ehh throughout the book. I just didn't like him or really get into him at all.

The ending wraps up like three storylines in minutes.
Profile Image for Hillari DeSchane.
Author 8 books20 followers
May 7, 2012
I won't be the first long-time Amanda Quick (Jayne Ann Krentz) fan to voice her disappointment that one of my favorite authors is just 'going through the motions' in her latest release. 'Crystal Gardens' is a mash-up of themes, events and even character names from her backlist. She's done all this before, and better.

Of deeper concern is that Quick/Krentz appears to be dredging up some unappealing and long-discredited notions of 'romance' in her effort to prop up this weak offering. Quick/Krentz has crossed the line with Lucas Sebastian, from alpha male to borderline abuser, a la the bad ol' days of Rosemary Rogers and 'Sweet Savage Love' et al. It's not that I want my protagonist to be a wimp, but a romantic hero, no matter how dark and brooding at the opening of our story, must have a core of basic decency and the desire to protect his beloved, and by extension, others less powerful than himself.

Here we have a hero who Quick/Krantz describes as: 'dark and terrifying,' ‘with an aura of menace,’ and ‘flat, cold eyes.’ Of more concern is how she describes Lucas’s treatment of the women in his life: with his elderly aunt he reacts with ‘rage slashing through him.’ She sensibly responds, ‘Lucas, please, you are frightening me,' yet it feels as if Quick/Krentz is sympathizing with Lucas here rather than his aunt’s observation. In another encounter Lucas ‘picked up the sterling silver letter opener and balanced it on two fingers' while he talks to her. At different points he tells the heroine, ‘It is not your affair,’ and 'never doubt that I have innumerable uses for you.’ Even during a putative reconciliation scene he tells his stepmother, ‘Enough' and, 'are you finished?’

Most telling is the other characters’ treatment of Lucas at the end. Even at the HEA wrap-up, everyone walks on eggshells around him: townspeople are 'too polite--and too intimidated by Lucas--to inquire;’ 'No one wanted to risk bringing the wrath of the new master of Crystal Gardens down on his or her head.' That’s not sexy, that’s psychopathic.

Romance writers have worked too hard to bring recognition to our genre as something more than 'housewife porn.' I don't want to go back to the days of saying, 'yes it's a romance novel but..." 'Crystal Gardens' is a step in the wrong direction. For Amanda Quick/Jayne Ann Krentz, and for romance readers.
Profile Image for Phrynne.
4,035 reviews2,728 followers
June 28, 2015
I wonder if I would have enjoyed this book more if I had read it rather than listened to it on audiobook. The reader was really not my cup of tea at all. I can't begin to describe how she sounded but for me anyway it was not good. Still I persevered and the story was reasonable. I could not develop any attachment to the characters because of the way their voices were read. A bit of a disappointment really:(
Profile Image for Pepa.
1,044 reviews288 followers
August 20, 2014
El amor muy muy precipitado y la relación entre ellos, cuando menos, muy "moderna".
El tema del suspense no está mal, pero tampoco es que me haya emocionado, hartita del tema de las corrientes de energía, que tampoco, al final, he tenido muy claro qué narices pasaba con el dichoso jardin jajajaja
Lo que sí me ha sorprendido es la "·naturalidad" y lo "normal" que comentan el tema de los trabajillos de él, justicia por su mano.
Entretenido, pero me esperaba mucho más
Profile Image for  Danielle The Book Huntress .
2,756 reviews6,620 followers
June 13, 2013
Crystal Gardens is for readers who enjoy their historical romance with strong paranormal elements. In this case, a huge part of the story is the concept of 'psychical energies.' Both Evangeline and Lucas have paranormal abilities, and they are drawn to Crystal Gardens, Lucas' deceased uncle's estate by no accident. In the case of Lucas, he comes to investigate his uncle's murder. Evangeline comes to soak up the atmosphere and work on her series of serial novels, and also to investigate the place that her father (a man who studied psychical energies and invented machines that ran on these energies) was obsessed with. Evangeline is also fleeing a murderer and ends up running right into Lucas' arms, which is a very good thing! Lucas is just the knight in tarnished armor to keep her safe.

I enjoyed listening to this book on audio but it did fall short overall. The narrator has a very dramatic way of reading it. Sometimes, her voice sounded a little odd (especially when she narrated the male characters), but I loved her British accent, and that each character sounded distinctive. I think that Quick's books lend themselves very well to audiobooks. Her style is very focused on the mystery components, and the romance seems to take a bit of a back seat at times. This would probably bother me more if I was reading than when I listen to books. That is not to say that the romance wasn't good. It was. I just could have used more than I got. I do feel that she emphasized the paranormal elements too much. She used the term 'psychical' excessively. I think that the reader gets the point about the paranormal energies and she could have spent time on building up the story in other ways. I do think Quick excelled in her descriptions of the Gardens and its otherworldly atmosphere. I felt like I was there in the Gardens, which might be a very strange experience indeed.

Unfortunately, the characters didn't feel as well-developed as I would have liked. I found Evangeline and Lucas likable and intriguing, but I don't feel that I knew them as well as I wanted. I feel that Quick did more telling about them than showing. Maybe she could have caused their characterization come to light more organically if she had spent more time on revealing who they were than explaining about the paranormal elements of the Crystal Gardens. At the end of the story, I could feel their attraction and feelings for each other, but I didn't get to explore this powerful love that supposedly had developed between them. Since this is a romance, that is crucial. I found the love scenes well written and passionate, and I really liked this about the book. I did feel the attraction between Evangeline and Lucas, although Quick sort of stole its impact by implying it was related to the psychical energies. Lucas is the kind of hero I love, strong, intelligent, compelling, and dangerous in an appealing way, but something was missing from his portrayal. Evangeline was a good person, a sweet woman who is independent and intelligent, and I wanted things to work out for her, but she wasn't distinctive as a character. The secondary character were barely fleshed out. I did like Evangeline's friends Clarissa and Beatrice, as well as Lucas' siblings, Beth and Tony. I also like Molly, Evangeline's maid, and Stone, Lucas' manservant, but they weren't as vivid as I would have liked. Judith, Lucas' stepmother seemed more lively in her characterization, especially with her feelings of antipathy towards Lucas and the reasons for them. The way Lucas treated Judith endeared me to him. He was respectful and he took his responsibilities for her very seriously even though she had never treated him well. The villain was quite cardboard, and his motivations were shallow. He shows up just in time for a thrilling climax, but he spends very little time in this book overall.

I guess it's clear I wanted to like this book more than I did. I liked it, but I think that this author is capable of writing a better book than this. I say that with all respect for her. I hope that the next books in the Ladies of Mystery have the spark that this book was lacking, because I think this series really has potential. And I am a sucker for the Victorian Gothic romance!
Profile Image for Gabija. Keista Skaitytoja.
715 reviews76 followers
September 29, 2023
Ech… norėjau, kad man patiktų šita knyga… labai. Nes viršelis ir anotacija labai domino… bet… na visas tas mistinis siužetas buvo nereikalingas čia. Manau jeigu tai būtų tiesiog istorinis romanas, su ta detektyvine linija, tai būtų buvę net labai gerai, bet tos visos mistinės galios, čia labai kišo koja…beet kam patinka 🔥 vietos, jų čia rasit, kelias net😅 tai užtai dar vienas pliusas nuo manęs🤭, tik, kad nežinau ar dėl vertimo, ar autorė ir orginalo kalba, kai kuriuos dalykus įvardina juokingai🙈😅 žodžiu, jeigu ne paranormalūs dalykai, būtų buvus net labai nebloga istorija.👌 kitas dalis skaitysiu, įdomu ar autorė pasitaisys😅 gal įtikinamiau jau bus😊
Profile Image for Loreta Kijanina.
121 reviews12 followers
April 30, 2023
Viršelis wow, bet turinys ne mano stiliaus, gaila bet kitų dalių neskaitysiu .
Profile Image for Dianne.
1,848 reviews158 followers
July 25, 2020
2.5 Stars

Crystal Gardens by Amanda Quick


If I had seen the words ‘extraordinary’ or psychical’ one more time I may have plucked out my own eyeballs. Nevertheless, I suppose that complaint is unimportant, as the rest of the story did not live up to Ms Quick’s usual efforts.
With several different story lines the author could investigate and take further, this book still fell flat for me. The romance (as thin as that is) progressed too quickly, the sex seemed contrived, and more elaborate than usual. The three story lines just came together too easily with all the ‘bad guys’ taken care of with no harm done to anyone.

The story in a nutshell->Evangeline is trying to escape a horrific encounter in the city AND continue with the writing for a newspaper of her serialized novel. Soon, very soon, she is accosted in her lovely little cottage and take refuge into the suspect garden (The Crystal Gardens) of her landlord Mr Lucas Sebastian. Lucas swiftly comes to her rescue and her attacker is well and truly taken care of--- and disposed of by the garden in question.

Naturally, they both have ‘hidden’ talent of the ‘psychical’ kind. Eventually they do consummate their relationship, find who, what and why Evangeline is being sought by unsavory characters. And they live happily ever after.

I must say that the fact that Evangeline’s talent growing when they are needed the most to help out in a bad situation or to heal someone was a little suspect.

This was merely an adequate display of Ms Quicks’ talents. I don’t understand it since she is usually an author that can grab me and pull me into a story no matter what it is about and keep me enthralled for hours. Not this time.


Profile Image for Sandra.
1,382 reviews85 followers
February 18, 2013
Re-read 18/2/13

My opinion of this new series JAK book hasn't changed, it is still well written, good characters, Victorian England at its paranormal romance best.

That said, JAK has repeated some plot points from previous books, the people eating plant maze, the Sensation Writer heroine, the murky crystals and the most obvious one, the psychical nature of our H/h. It so obviously draws on the Arcane books without ever mentioning them.

The paranormal, creepy gardens surrounding the almost abandoned house of the dead mad botanist, inherited by our Hero Lucas Sebastian, becomes its own character.

Our Paid Companion/Sensation Writer/Private Enquiry Agent heroine Evangeline Ames, who is renting the cottage on the edge of said creepy garden, flees towards it at 2am to avoid a knife wielding would-be murderer.

And the plot is set. JAK weaves effortlessly between several subplots, murders, attempted murders, missing servants, treasure hunters, with the menace of the garden increasing all the time.

Looking forward to the next Ladies of Lantern Street novel.
Profile Image for TJ.
3,285 reviews280 followers
February 20, 2012
2.5/5.0
3 stars is really a stretch but others might like everything "psychical" more than I.



For a complete review, visit Affaire de Coeur magazine, hard copy or online, April/May 2012 issue.
Profile Image for Daniella.
256 reviews636 followers
July 11, 2015
I was very reluctant to start Crystal Gardens because I've never really liked paranormal stories. The few ones that I have read usually had convoluted plot lines that bordered on ridiculousness. The last one, Elizabeth Boyle's Tempted by the Night was so bad that I cringe every time I remember it. Indeed, it takes a great amount of skill on the part of the writer to weave a tale like this without it being trippy.

And Ms. Amanda Quick did just that.

Despite a lot of skepticism and low expectations on my part, I actually found myself getting into the story. I even accepted all that talk about psychical talents and whatnot, and I have to credit that to Ms. Quick's amazing storytelling skills.

Most of my problems were actually on the characterisation and not the plot, really. The main reason why I only gave this 3 stars is because I found Lucas to be an extremely problematic lead. I've read too many Amanda Quick novels to know that she likes her heroes to be stoic, dangerous and controlling. And to be perfectly honest, I like that type. In fact, that's one of the reasons why I find myself drawn to her books in the first place. But Lucas just takes stoic, dangerous and controlling--especially controlling--to a whole new level. He was just too manipulative--far more manipulative than the average AQ hero. He didn't even give Evie options; he just went there, claimed her, and assumed control of her life. For example, after they had sex, he just went on and announced that they're engaged without even proposing to her.
description

Look, I love it when the guy gets possessive. I would even go far as to say that I have an unusually high tolerance of male possessiveness. But I do draw the line at blatant subjugation. That implies that the hero doesn't even respect the heroine enough to give her options. And that is what Lucas did. Even in the end, he never gave Evie the power. There was no equal sharing that occurred, only conquest. In the end, I felt like Lucas controlled their relationship--that he had the upper hand. And that is not my definition of true love. I guess that's also why I'm not convinced that what they shared was everlasting. It may have been lust. It may have just been the need to dominate. But whatever Lucas felt for Evie, I'm pretty sure that it was definitely not love. At least not the way I would have defined it.

There was also the lack of depth in the secondary characters. They all felt flat, which was a shame really, because I felt that Stone, Molly, Tony and Beth had the potential to be far more endearing than they actually appeared in the novel. I would have been more invested in Stone and Molly's relationship had they been properly developed. Again, such a shame.

Overall, this was an okay read. Likeable, even. It's just sad that there were a lot of missed opportunities. This could easily have been a very compelling story.
Profile Image for Ingrida.
19 reviews1 follower
October 26, 2023
Ne mano stiliaus knyga, būtų daug įdomiau susiskaitę, jei būtų paprastas istorinis romanas, be jokių paranormalių reiškinių. Dabar pasirodė, kad reikia nereikia visur buvo įterpiamos atgamtinės jėgos. (Dar nustebino, kad knygoje buvo labai daug gramatinių klaidų.)
Profile Image for Kathy Martin.
4,159 reviews115 followers
June 29, 2021
Evangeline Ames has come to the quiet, rural town of Little Digby to get over an attempted murder and to write the next chapters of her sensational novel. She has been there a couple of weeks suffering from both boredom and writer's block, when she is awakened one evening by someone breaking in. She flees to the nearest home, that of her landlord Lucas Sebastian. She attempts to hide from her assailant in the very scary gardens that surround the house. She had been warned by the locals that strange things happened in that garden and her own paranormal senses tell her that the locals are correct. Lucas comes to her rescue and exhibits some paranormal senses of his own doing so.

The two had met in a local bookshop when Lucas arrived in town to stay at Crystal Gardens. Lucas was fascinated by her but his main concern was learning who had murdered his uncle. After Evie's attack, he took advantage of the situation to get closer to her by providing protection. Someone was clearly trying to kill her. But Evangeline was no helpless victim. She might outwardly seem like an unobtrusive lady's companion but she was employed by an agency to do discreet private inquiries. The agency looked for young women with paranormal skills.

Lucas and Evie get closer as they work to find out who killed his uncle, who is trying to kill her, why the paranormal energies are increasing at Crystal Gardens making the gardens more and more dangerous, and who is hunting for the hidden Roman treasure that is rumored to be buried in the Night Garden. Of course they also have to deal with the ramifications of their relationship in a time when a woman's reputation was worth more than gold.

Evie had no intention of ever marrying because she believed herself too old, too poor, and of too low a social status but that doesn't mean that she isn't willing to explore her sensual side if the right man and the right situation comes along. And Lucas looks like the right man. Her justification is that it will help her bee a better writer of her sensational novels if she has some experience. Lucas, having determined to have her in his life, is more than willing to accommodate her. When the two are compromised by spending the night together in the garden, Lucas seizes the opportunity and announces their engagement. It takes a while to reconcile Evie and it takes some serious but unconventional courting before he can win her hand.

I love the relationship between Evie and Lucas. Neither one of them fits into the normal mode of society and wouldn't even if they didn't have paranormal powers. I like the banter between them. I like that Evie knows Lucas better than his own family and accepts him as he is. The rest of the world is pretty much afraid of him. He is a man of responsibility and honor who has a paranormal gift that makes him very valuable in solving the most difficult of murder cases. I also like the relationship that Lucas has with his much younger twin brother and sister.

This was a very good romance that I recommend to lovers of historical romance, paranormal romance, and Jayne Ann Krentz in all her many names and genres.
Profile Image for Mollie *scoutrmom*.
938 reviews38 followers
April 13, 2012
First, the disclaimers. I received this advanced copy from a fellow reader, not from any organization trying to promote buzz or generate great reviews or anything of that nature. I acknowledge that I was reading an uncorrected proof and the errors I saw will probably not be seen by the general reader. I don't let the fact that I did not buy the product influence the review.

I adored this story! It contains a mystery full of red herrings. We are viewing varying motives of greed, revenge, jealousy, in multiple incidents that seem related but unravel upon closer investigation. The denouement came as a surprise to me. I usually can guess an outcome but this spaghetti tangle of clues made wonderful reading. It seemed more realistic and true-to-life to me than something like one of Tony Hillerman's straightforward plot lines.

The romance part of the plot was not quite as good. Amanda Quick has done better in her earlier works. The relationship doesn't really build, it kind of unfolds with little in the way of obstacles unrelated to the mystery part of the story. It's as if they met and each thought, "Oh, there you are," and went on as if it was supposed to have happened. We are not given much insight into the protagonists' views or introspection regarding the developing relationship outside of the dialogue.

The paranormal part of the plot was OK. Those unfamiliar with her Arcane Society series might feel there was not enough world-building. No characters from the Arcane Society appear in the story, but the author created an identical paranormal environment. I like that the paranormal aspects of the story are germane to the setting, the plot, and the characters' identities; and there was no "woo woo factor" for the sake of cheap reader thrills.

Now, the best part...the hero and heroine. This was not the kind of romance where the two protagonists seem to exist in a vacuum independent of subplots or secondary characters. Their friends, family, employers, and employees affect the character growth they must each go through in order to be able to accept that they are deserving of their good fortune in stumbling across a soul mate. They have baggage from their pasts that are stumbling blocks obstructing the chance of a positive outcome. I wish the author had strengthened this aspect of the story. The characters themselves are admirable, attractive, and ahead of their Victorian time in their chosen career paths.

Not only will I probably read this again, but I may even end up purchasing (secondhand, as is my wont) a copy of the final product for comparison. Very enjoyable.
Profile Image for Donna.
544 reviews234 followers
May 2, 2012
I never thought that I would be giving such a low rating to a book written by an author who used to be one of my favorites, but here you have it. This book was a failure, a malfunction, if you will. Okay, enough of that. This is what irks me about this book.

This story is supposed to be taking place sometime in the late 1800's, from what I gather, during the latter part of the Victorian Era, though there is no time stamp at the beginning of the story unlike with most of Amanda Quick's books. But what makes this the Victorian Era? A few gaslights and candlelight? A few chemises and carriage rides? The language is utterly modern, very non-British, I might add, filled with idioms not used during this time period. I half expected the main characters to start texting one another on their iphones.

And speaking of the main characters, I don't know about you, but I believe that a good comfort read romance should have characters that the reader can admire, or at the very least, not detest. Not so with Crystal Gardens and Lucas Sebastian. I get that he is supposed to be the mistaken villain of the piece turned hero as Evie believes the villain/hero of her sensational writings to be. But what makes Lucas a good guy? He is a freakin murderer, no matter that he murders bad guys. Case in point, the knife wielding Sharpy Hobson is no saint, but the way in which Lucas disposes of him is rather disturbing. And Lucas does it again later on with the actor trying to hurt Evie and the man who hurt his stepmother. Vengeance, anyone?

As for Evie, she is merely boring, same as the nonexistent romance. Telling the reader that Lucas and Evie are made for each other does not convince me. I need evidence beyond a heated look or two. Not that I cared one way or another if the two of them lived happily ever after or not. I just wanted the story to end. The multiple mysteries dragged on and on. And with the addition of each new character, the existing characters felt the need to restate what the reader already knew to bring all the new characters up to speed, sparing no details. Repetition, anyone?

I guess I am somewhat upset (can you tell?) because when I think back to all the wonderful books this author has written, I can see that she has either lost her touch, run out of stories to tell, or is so immersed in the paranormal aspects of her stories that the characters and any uniqueness they might have possessed have ceased to matter. Still, I keep reading her books, hoping she will recapture that earlier magic in her writing, which was before the Arcane novels and all their offshoots choked the life out of her novels. Enough is enough, already. Yes, I know that no one is forcing me to read them. But let me just finish my rant by saying this: Bring back the magic, Ms. Quick/Krentz/Castle, and I don't mean the kind generated by crystals.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Cherise.
477 reviews52 followers
April 2, 2012
Evangeline is a paid companion and a budding authoress. She is renting a cottage from the elusive Lucas Sebastian on an estate that is buzzing with paranormal vibes and rumors of things that go bump in the night. Most townsfolk are scared of the estate and the owner, but Evangeline finds herself attracted to both. When Lucas rescues her, Evangeline finds herself teaming up with her mysterious landlord.

The plot to this story sounded wonderful to me. I am not a huge fan of Ms. Quick and all her pseudonyms, that is to say I haven’t' read all of her books, but I have genuinely enjoyed the ones that I have read. I usually like all things romance and all things paranormal. This one also promised to have plenty of mystery. So when I was offered this book I jumped at the chance. Unfortunately this book didn't live up to any of my expectations.

This book really fell flat to me on many levels. The characters were very one dimensional. I never got the feeling that they were ever fully developed or created. I never felt attached or any sort of connection to any of the characters. Usually in a book, especially in a series, I feel some sort of camaraderie to at least one character. The characters in this story were all interchangeable. No one stood out, no one made an impression on me. The main characters, especially, lacked personality and their romance lacked heat.

The storyline seemed to have all the necessary components of a bestselling paranormal romance/mystery, yet it never kept me on the edge of my seat. It really read like a rough draft. It had all the right ideas included, but it was missing the details. I didn't feel like we had a proper flow to the story, no real build up or climax. The tempo was just a lazy stroll through an underdeveloped story.

Honestly if this was my first book by this author, I wouldn't feel compelled to pick up another. I think hardcore fans will be a little more tolerant of this book, but I can't. Even if I have lukewarm feelings for a series my curious nature will have me wanting to read the next books. I can walk away from this series without a backward glance and without feeling like I am missing out on anything.

Cherise Everhard, April 2012

Profile Image for Jess the Romanceaholic.
1,033 reviews491 followers
July 18, 2013
Not my favorite from Amanda Quick, but still entertaining. As with all of Ms. Quick/Krentz/Castle's books, it was very... light. I've read all but a few books from this author (which is saying something -- I know there's over 80 of them, probably more), and one thing I've always been able to count on would be that they're easy reading. There's excitement, danger, and a touch of steam, and makes a great pool-side read.

3.5/5 Stars
Profile Image for Kate McMurry.
Author 1 book124 followers
July 7, 2024
Review from April, 2012:

Book 1 in a new Jayne Ann Krentz paranormal, historical, romantic-suspense duology

Evangeline Ames is in her late 20s and a spinster by the social standards of Victorian England. She believes she has little chance of ever marrying because her father, an obsessed inventor, left her penniless when he committed suicide a few years after Evangeline's mother's death. Fortunately, after years of struggle, Evangeline has come into her own. She has a budding career writing "sensation" novels which are serialized in a newspaper, and she works as a paranormal "private inquiry agent," the historical equivalent of a modern private investigator (PI). She has the paranormal ability of being able to find anything, whether it is something lost, or some information that a criminal wants to hide. She works for an agency run by two women whose three investigators are all women with paranormal talents (the "ladies of Lantern Street" of the series title). The agency's primary clients are wealthy women who require a discrete investigation into men who might potentially be out to bilk either them or their heirs.

Since Evangeline always works in disguise, rendering her presumably invisible and anonymous to the people she investigates, prior to her most recent investigation, she did not consider her work dangerous. But not long before the story began, someone tried to murder her. Though she successfully defended herself, using a unique aspect of her paranormal power, the death of her assailant was a tremendous shock. She has come to the small village of Little Digby for a dual purpose, to recover from the trauma of the attack and also to have uninterrupted time to work on her current novel, which has stringent deadlines for regularly delivering chapters to her publisher.

At the moment the story opens, Evangeline is struggling with writer's block and boredom. The only interesting thing in the neighborhood is the estate her cottage is attached to. Its gardens are notorious in the area for their weird and deadly plants which, rumor has it, killed the former owner. In spite of--or perhaps because of--these frightening tales, Evangeline has been gingerly exploring the outer areas of the estate, using her paranormal abilities to protect herself from stumbling into trouble with a garden that, she discovers to her delight, is infused with potent, paranormal energy.

As it turns out, it is extremely fortunate she has been trespassing into the mysterious estate, because another would-be murderer invades her home, and Evangeline flees from him onto the mystical estate grounds. There she encounters her landlord in person for the first time, the current owner of the estate, 34-year-old Lucas Sebastian. He helps Evangeline head off the murderer, and in the process each learns that the other has paranormal abilities, something neither has ever before encountered in the opposite sex.

I've been a fan of Jayne Ann Krentz's contemporary and futuristic romances for many years, but I did not begin reading her historical romances written as Amanda Quick until she added paranormal elements to them with tie-ins to her contemporary, Arcane Society books. I enjoyed the Arcane historical romances so much, I went back and read all the Amanda Quick historicals I had missed and have enjoyed them quite a bit.

Crystal Gardens is not directly part of the Arcane world in that none of the previous Arcane Society characters appear within it, and the Arcane Society itself is never mentioned. However, the book's paranormal elements have similar names and functions as those in the Arcane series, so those who are fans of Krentz's Arcane books should enjoy this story.

In this book, Krentz employs a fan-favorite structure that she has used in essentially every one of her romantic-suspense novels: the hero and heroine meet, discover that each has a mystery to solve, that their mysteries are somehow tied together and, after much (often humorous) back-and-forth, stop fighting against each other and join forces. Besides this book, Krentz has also written multiple other historical romances set in Victorian England in which either the hero, heroine, or both are PI's, and it is a theme that works well within the romantic-suspense genre.

Evangeline is a classic Krentz heroine. She is independent, morally staunch, and determined to the point of bullheaded stubbornness. Best of all, she is as willing and capable as Lucas of being a positive, protective warrior, which is demonstrated by her regularly defending herself, Lucas, and helpless victims from the depredations of several different villains.

In this story, as in all Krentz's novels, the heroine and hero are fascinatingly unique to the point of being eccentric--a tendency that is amplified in Krentz's paranormal novels by the addition of magical powers to the mix. The unconventional abilities and goals of Krentz's protagonists have inevitably led to isolation and loneliness, and in each other they experience for the first time real understanding, appreciation and acceptance. This is a huge reason why Krentz's romances are never just festivals of sex. Instead, they always present a vital meeting of mind and spirit between the protagonists, making it possible for the reader to truly believe what all romance novels aim for (and many fail to achieve), that the protagonists are "soul mates" destined for each other.

I personally find Krentz's overt use of recurrent themes and plot structures to be an asset, not a liability. It makes her a dependably entertaining writer. She knows how to write romantic suspense, and she does it well, every time. In addition, her characters are always strong, and their blood relations and families of affiliation can be counted on to provide entertaining and emotionally satisfying interactions, whether they are acting as mentors, allies, or humorously subverting the protagonists with "friendly fire." Most of all, readers can count on Krentz for her skill as a writer. Her use of paranormal elements is logically consistent, and her command of language is smooth, clear, and never calls irritating attention to itself with gimmicky flourishes. In short, her writing gets out of the way and lets the story take center stage.

I rate this novel as follows:

Heroine: 4 stars
Hero: 4 stars
Subcharacters: 4 stars
Fantasy World-Building: 4 stars
Romance Plot: 4 stars
Action-Adventure Plot: 4 stars
Writing: 5 stars
Overall: 4 stars

Second read 7/6/24: I enjoyed this novel just as much as the first time I read it. I also noticed this time around, which I did not during my previous read, that there are three, large, gray, paranormal crystals in this story that are a crucial element in the Rainshadow sub-series of the Harmony futuristic-romance series by Krentz, written as Jayne Castle. The Sebastian family in this novel are the ancestors of the Sebastian family in the Rainshadow series. I also just realized that this book and the first book in the Rainshadow series were published the same year, 2012. So this is obviously one of JAK's entertaining, purposeful series crossovers.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Antonia.
20 reviews3 followers
April 27, 2012
This was horribly disappointing. It will only appeal to people who overlook the recurring flaws in the Arcane series.

The psychic abilities are so ill defined I know she can find things because she says she can. She does everything else but. She manipulates auras and para energy. She can kill (can't all these women). As for the guy (I admit I just finished the book and forgot the names) he is a typical arcane male. Misunderstood, powerful, can kill, good with money, and as interesting as watching paint dry.

Since this is an offshoot of the Arcane series i assume it uses the same rules as Arcane. 1 strong gift, no more than that. But a finder can manipulate auras? By her own rules that can't occur.

I miss the straight historical fiction Krentz/Quick used to write. There used to be more variability in her characters. Does this sound familiar? A woman with no close ties to anyone and a man who no one else understands have sparks at first, then sex in an odd place, then an awkward announcement of a marriage and finally everything is solved with the bad guy having an accident or killing himself then all explained in a chapter where the hero gets to beat his chest to friends and family.

Also these arcane/crystal garden books are bad fantasy and bad science fiction. Laws should remain constant, not change with whims or there is no tension in the story. You know a stroke of a pen will fix it all. Harmony sounds like the north west coast of the US with no major advances in technology except a substitution of amber for anything electronic with no difference in how they run.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Kezermezer.
78 reviews10 followers
July 6, 2012
When Evangeline Ames is attacked in her bed in the middle of the night, she climbs out the window and runs to safety - in the dubious form of the walled estate next door, its strangely luminous gardens, and its mysterious new owner, Lucas Sebastian.

Given the current downturn in quality of Quick/Krentz/Castle books, I was disappointed but not surprised to find that Crystal Gardens continued the trend. Newcomers or insanely die-hard fans will probably appreciate this effort, but I (generally a die-hard fan myself) found it to be formulaic in the extreme. In fact, it felt like someone else could have studied Quick's MO and written this book. The spark, magic, wit, and humor I used to rely on Quick for was just not here. Has Quick's passion moved on but she continues in this vein for monetary reasons? Is she contracted for more books than she can handle? I don't know, but I sure hope it's temporary and we'll be seeing work that matches her previous caliber again soon.

If you're new to Quick and also feel Crystal Gardens was flat and dull, please don't give up on her yet! Give her Arcane series a try. They take place in the regency period (Quick) as well as the present (Jayne Ann Krentz) and the future (Jayne Castle). The first is Second Sight and is everything you'd hope for from Crystal Gardens, but actually delivers.
Profile Image for Evelyn.
Author 1 book33 followers
August 18, 2019
I am beginning to find these Amanda Quick novels set in Victorian England a bit formulaic, but I still enjoy them. There are always two people, man and woman, each with their own "psychical" talents, who happen to be thrown together by danger. They are immediately drawn to each other with a monumental passion and have to solve a dangerous mystery together. Someone, usually the heroine, will say "Mmm" or "Hmm" more than once in each book, and there will be 2 or 3 scenes of a sexual nature. In this book, Crystal Gardens is a country estate recently inherited by Lucas Sebastian after the unexplained death of his uncle. On the estate is a maze full of eerie and sometimes lethal plants. There seems to be a paranormal vortex in the surrounding countryside that is making the garden even more powerful and dangerous. Evangeline Ames runs to the gardens when her life is threatened and meets Lucas. Together they will need to keep her safe from assassins, find out how his uncle died, and try to destroy the lethal powers of the garden maze. Formula and all, I still enjoy the thrill of wondering what will happen next in these stories, who will be the villain, and how will they be thwarted. The paranormal subplots are interesting and justice will prevail. I am running out of them, unfortunately.
Profile Image for BiblioJen.
183 reviews15 followers
July 1, 2012
3.5 stars

I am a long-time Amanda Quick fan, and I particularly enjoy listening to her stories via audiobook. This was not my favorite offering from her, but I thought the core story was quite good. The overall book suffered a bit from Quick's obvious efforts to set up for a full series. The story started with some good action, and then I thought she was going to talk me to death as we entered a long section of backstory, exposition, dialogue and miscellaneous secondary characters who were clearly introduced just so that they could be used in later books in this series. Once we got past that, and really began to advance the central storyline, I was hooked as usual.

This is a historical, romantic mystery/suspense/thriller, with the added element of psychic talent in the main characters. Quick writes strong, sensible, independent female characters, and I always find her stories enjoyable and entertaining. I thought the narrator, Justine Eyre, did a good job. She was easy to listen to, and had distinct "voices" for each character.

I would recommend this as a nice, low-angst, enjoyable summer listen!

Profile Image for Amber.
10 reviews1 follower
December 2, 2011
Okay, well I haven't read it yet, as it's not yet available. But I KNOW I'll love it. Who doesn't love some Arcane thrills?
Profile Image for Lauren.
2,516 reviews159 followers
November 23, 2020
Crystal Gardens
2 Stars

In one word "disappointing".

While Amanda Quick's writing is often formulaic, it usually contains at least one or two original ideas. Unfortunately, Crystal Gardens is nothing more than a regurgitation of elements from previous books including themes, plot lines, and even character names.

Lucius and Evangeline are carbon copies of other Quick heroes and heroines; his characterization is that of the Arcane style hunter, and she is both a female private investigator similar to Lavinia Lake AND a sensationalist writer like Caroline Fordyce. Although these archetypes can be appealing, they are completely overdone here, and it is difficult to engage with either character. Lucas, in particular, is problematic as there is a grain of misogyny and even psychopathy underlying his words and actions.

The actual plot is a narrative mess. The beginning is disjointed, and lacking sufficient exposition. It is as if the reader is dumped into an ongoing TV show after missing the first few episodes. In addition, the various storylines are a mesh of poorly developed threads. There are numerous crimes and criminals with nothing to bring them together in any semblance of unity or cohesion. The pacing is slow at first and rushed at the end.

In sum, this book is definitely not up to Quick's standards. As a fan of her work, I hope the next installment does better justice to her work.
Profile Image for Knjigisti.
164 reviews2 followers
February 10, 2022
Veoma zanimljiva i misteriozna knjiga.

Pre neki dan sam sela i pročešljala sve Amandine knjige koje su kod nas objavljene i napravila spisak svih serijala i delova, pa bi ovo bila prva od tri u ovom serijalu.

Svidelo mi se vreme u koje je radnja smeštena, kao i kako je odnos iz zvaničnog prešao u intimniji i kako su postali tim, a ne da se sve vrti oko jedne osobe.

Iako je autorka ubacila natprirodne darove, meni su oni kao šlag na torti.
Profile Image for Ivan Jovanovic (Valahiru).
292 reviews10 followers
January 19, 2020
Nisam naročito zadovoljan. Tema je interesantna, čak su i likovi zanimljivi. Ali je prepuno mesta na kojima autorka pokušava da uputi da je atmosfera natprirodna i sablasna. Umesto da opiše konkretno šta se dešava ili da nam opiše predeo, emocije u tom trenutku, ona koristi iste izraze kroz celo delo:
"Aktivirala je čula"
"Znala je da su njene prijateljice aktivirale svoje darove"
"Aktivirala je svoj dar"
"Lukas je aktivirao svoj dar"
I tako u beskraj... Zaista ume da dosadi i odvrati čitaoca od knjige. 🤔🙄
Može poslužiti za ubijanje vremena, jer se relativno brzo čita. Stil pisanja je jednostavan. Nema dvosmislenih rečenica, niti skrivenih značenja. Naprotiv, piše bez nekih velikih emocija, a rečenice su konkretne. Već sam pre polovine knjige znao ko je naručio napad na glavnu junakinju, što je u ovom delu bilo očigledno. Od polovine knjige se popravila, ali ne dovoljno. Ne kajem se što sam pročitao knjigu, jer sam se upoznao sa stilom pisanja Amande Kvik, koji se meni nije dopao. Izbegavam ostatak njenih radova, ali vama preporučujem da joj date šansu. Možda se vama ipak dopadne. Sve je stvar ukusa! 😊
Profile Image for Cindy.
939 reviews19 followers
April 21, 2012
Evangeline has taken a sabbatical from her day job and retired to the country to write her first novel. Of course, that's not the only reason - there was that little matter of a violent altercation involving her last case. And then there is the inspiration to be found for a supernatural novel in the local Roman ruins and the country house known as Crystal Gardens which locals prefer to avoid. Sadly, after completing four chapters of the novel she is extremely uninspired, suffering both boredom and writer's block.

Additional inspiration strikes when our heroine flees her cottage for Crystal Gardens pursued by a murderer with a knife and falls almost literally into the arms of Lucas, the new owner of Crystal Gardens. The carnivorous plants in the Night Garden get the attempted murderer, so Lucas attempts to get to the bottom of the attack by interviewing Evangeline. Not much is resolved so he returns her to her cottage before anyone sees them together. [The setting is Victorian so seeing the heroine, dressed only in her wrapper, in the company of the hero would be far more shocking than a contemporary heroine who moonlights as Miss Kitty Galore at the local strip club.] Evangeline now has the cure for her writer's block and her boredom, she will make the villain of her piece into the hero and model him after the fascinating Lucas!

Lucas sends for an aunt to provide propriety to the situation and has Evangeline move into Crystal Gardens so he can protect her while trying to solve the crime. To Lucas dismay, more and more family members appear throughout the story adding further complexities to the story line. Besides solving murders, attempted murders, thefts, and the mystery of the out-of-control gardens; Evangeline deals with Lucas' stepmother who has dark secrets and a taste for melodrama, the matchmaking aunt and the much-younger and scientifically, but not psychically, inclined siblings.

This is a paranormal romance. The hero, the heroine, the heroine's friends, the plants, AND the pool in the garden all possess some sort of psychic power. Despite the psychic stuff, this is NOT an Arcane Society novel - so don't spend your time looking around virtual corners expecting them to show up. They don't.

This is romantic suspense - it has sexual tension but not a whole lot of sex - and what occurs is not detailed. Krentz is great writer - whether she is in her Amanda Quick, Jayne Ann Krentz, or Jayne Castle mode. Her characters are fascinating, the dialogue is witty, and the plots are page turning. Probably because it is a Victorian setting, this book is 'cooler' in tone than some of her others. If you are new to the author you might want to start with one of her earlier novels - Scandal perhaps, or Ravished. Of course that might be because the Victorian era was never a personal interest of mine but she does make it breathe...

Good read? Yes. Will there be more in this series? Undoubtedly. Will I buy them? Definitely. And the ultimate accolade? My husband liked it too...
Profile Image for Tin.
340 reviews110 followers
July 28, 2013
Crystal Gardens is the first book in Amanda Quick's The Ladies of Lantern Street series and is a sub-series of her Arcane Society series, which I have been religiously following since 2006. Quick's commitment to the Victorian/Steampunk/Paranormal Romance world that she has created shows in each installment, as she continues to build this evocative, fascinating England full of "talented" individuals: she truly understands the abilities of her characters and has explored the limits of the genre that, I believe, she is at the forefront of.

Crystal Gardens is no exception. It begins with an attempt on Evangeline Ames' life, which she believes is intentional. It is fortunate that Evangeline Ames is renting a small cottage in Crystal Gardens, an estate owned by the Sebastian family -- and the current owner, Lucas Sebastian is in residence, investigating the mysterious death of his uncle, Chester, the former owner of the estate.

As a mystery, I love how Amanda Quick lays out the puzzle pieces in a clear and organized manner. Who is responsible for the attempt on Evangeline's life? Who killed Uncle Chester? What secrets are hidden in the Crystal Gardens? I love the procedural aspect of the novel -- how Lucas, Evangeline, and Lucas's step-siblings, Beth and Tony try to figure out all the questions that swirl around them. Amanda Quick ups the ante by introducing us to paranormal talents and a garden that emanates power ... and danger. The magical mixed in with the mysterious makes for classic Amanda Quick and fans will definitely not be disappointed.

My favorite part was the secondary story between Mr. Stone and Molly -- I loved seeing how two people with no psychical abilities cope with the adventures of their employers -- and, instead of feeling inferior, they manage to provide assistance using their own set of skills.

"Must be a bit strange to have some psychical talent."

"Mr. Sebastian says most people have a little," Stone said. "They just don't recognize it. He says they call it intuition."

"My ma says I have good intuition. Sometimes I just know things."

"So do I," Stone said. "I knew the first time I met Mr. Sebastian that I wanted to work for him."

"That's how I felt when I took the post with Miss Ames. I told myself it might lead to something much better."
- p. 289


I also love seeing how Amanda Quick develops the romances between her characters -- there is no grand declaration of love and no drama -- she works out the relationship in a very sensible way. At the end, what you will have are lovers who are also companions/partners. (Read Lucas and Evangeline's conversation in pages 371 - 372)

I did wish that Quick focused more on the Flint and Marsh agency and Evangeline's work with them. She teases her readers with glimpses of the agency does and the special people they hire. Let's see with the next book. ;-)
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