I have been traipsing through several of Christi Caldwell’s Regency era books, and I liked this one as well or better than most. It’s shorter than even Caldwell’s usually moderate length but doesn’t suffer for it. In this book, I think the hero grabbed my sympathy first, then eventually the heroine’s plight did too. The twist at the end was fun and unexpected.
I’ve added here a commentary on the author’s writing in general. I’ve tried to figure out what specifically draws me to Caldwell’s books as they mostly conform closely to the basics of the trope, so I keep wondering why I don’t grow bored. I’ve decided one aspect is that each has thus far had a delightful surprise twist at the end, usually one I didn’t see coming even after having read/listened to SO many books. Also, although not intensely intricately written or deeply detailed, Caldwell is able to evoke some genuinely romantic moments that ring true and I believe those moments are what romance readers are looking for.
Caldwell’s books (so far) are enjoyable, as well as decently written, plotted and paced. That is also nice to count on that dependability when you just want a pleasant read, believe it or not. Nothing worse than getting four or five chapters into a promising story and then get hit with some kind of bizarre wackiness that simply would not be likely, possible, feasible or make any sense at all.
Also, sometimes real life can be so confusing, hectic, hard, etc.; it’s a relief not to be drawn too hard through the emotional mud of extremely dire situations, terrible sorrows, extreme situations and emotions, wretched backstories or intensely drawn sketches of the “true” or “gritty” reality of the times as seems to be the current fashion of writing about this era.
One criticism is there is a bit too much introspection explaining the characters thoughts for my taste, which may be more confusing simply because I have been listening almost exclusively to audiobooks. If reading, I might not have to keep readjusting what I thought the character just said to “Oh that was a thought,” when it’s immediately followed by “What she instead said was...”. 😊
Still, I prefer to infer emotions than have them spelled out.
The “heat” index of this book was surprisingly clean despite some very touching romantic moments.