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Wessex Weddings #1

The Novice Bride

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As a novice, Lady Cecily of Fulford's knowledge of men is non-existent. But when tragic news bids her home immediately, her only means of escape from the convent is to brazenly offer herself to the enemy...as a bride! With her fate now in the hands of her husband, Sir Adam Wymark, she battles to protect her family. Suspicions and betrayal are rife, yet their convenient marriage offers Cecily much more than comfort in her knight's arms....

304 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2007

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About the author

Carol Townend

61 books92 followers
Carol Townend writes atmospheric Historical Romances and Sagas set in England and Europe. Born in Yorkshire, she went to a convent school high on the Whitby cliffs. Later, she studied history at Royal Holloway College, London. She lives in London with her husband and daughter.

Carol's first novel, Sapphire in the Snow, won the RNA New Writers' Award. Two other novels were shortlisted for the RoNA Rose award - Betrothed to the Barbarian in 2013 and Unveiling Lady Clare in 2015.

Carol loves research, and spends too much time hunting for excuses to go on research trips. She can often be seen teetering on the battlements of various stately homes or castles.

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Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Graham.
1,607 reviews61 followers
December 7, 2008
Set during the Norman Conquest, The Novice Bride takes a familiar conceit – having as its hero one of the invaders and its heroine a Saxon. This type of set up is a popular one as conflict between the characters is inevitable from the word go, and in some instances, authors using this type of plot let the stories write themselves. Not so Carol Townend! The tale that plays out in The Novice Bride is an utterly engaging one, and the author’s skill is so great that she effortlessly weaves the backdrop and central story together in such a way that the reader becomes enveloped in her historical world.

Indeed, it was the historical background that I found most enthralling in this story. The research is so thorough that everything seems real and authentic, and the experiencing of the sights and sounds of 11th century England is a joy. I really didn’t want the story to end. Taking her reader through a poverty-stricken village, a post-invasion Winchester struggling to come to terms with its new masters and the bleakness of an unforgiving English winter, Carol Townend is a confident, enthralling historical writer, one who never lets the backdrop overshadow her central romantic story.

And what a romance! In Cecily, the author has crafted a lovely and lovable heroine whose innocence and inherent goodness are her defining qualities... I defy anyone who reads this not to fall in love with her from the start. Cecily’s journey from prim and proper nun to loving wife is thoroughly engrossing. As for the hero, Adam Wymark is a little sterner and his character is the more complex of the two, and he’s a hero I could really identify with. His growing love for Cecily is always believable and makes for great reading. The romance scenes are well handled and full of subtlety and sweetness.

The rest of the story is populated with interesting supporting characters and tension between both the protagonists and everybody else. Carol Townend really puts across a feeling of what it was like to live in these harsh, violent times which is why I loved the book so much. In fact, it’s my favourite historical romance yet!
Profile Image for Romanticamente Fantasy.
8,036 reviews237 followers
February 6, 2024
Vanilla_91 - per RFS
.
Si sa, in guerra a pagare il prezzo peggiore sono sempre gli innocenti e ciò non era certamente diverso nell’antichità.
Lady Cecily Fulford è rinchiusa in convento per volontà paterna, ma dopo la battaglia di Hastings, con la morte del genitore e del fratello, è diventata l’erede di un castello che il duca conquistatore ha concesso a sir Adam per essersi distinto in battaglia.
Cecily è costretta ad abbandonare il convento per sposare colui che considera un nemico della sua gente, un invasore, ma scoprirà in suo marito un uomo giusto e onorevole.
Il perno della storia non è sicuramente qualcosa di mai visto, ma l’autrice ha giocato davvero bene le sue carte creando due personaggi ben definiti e con qualità accattivanti.

Adam ha il fascino “dell’uomo misterioso”, che è sempre apprezzato, ma è anche un protagonista gentile, attento ai bisogni della donna che ha sposato. Cecily è un mix affascinante di innocenza e fierezza, audacia e fragilità. È una personalità che si apre al lettore lentamente, ma con numerose sfumature che me l’hanno fatta apprezzare particolarmente.

L’amore tra i due personaggi si evolve con lentezza, passando attraverso diverse fasi, dato che sarà necessario per entrambi superare la diffidenza e le paure.
La sposa sassone è una storia che mi è piaciuta proprio per l’esaltazione di sentimenti teneri e molto positivi, per il rispetto e la gentilezza che prevalgono su emozioni più ruvide e mitigano anche la parte erotica, che non manca ma è più evasiva e di contorno.

Il romanticismo è sicuramente il sentimento prevalente, l’emozione che più risalta di pagina in pagina, accompagnato anche da temi importanti e attuali, come l’importanza di non dare nulla per scontato, la necessità di saper perdonare e concedere nuove possibilità e la capacità di imparare a trarre il meglio anche dalle situazioni che possono sembrare le più avverse.
È stata una lettura piacevole, una carezza leggera e delicata, una storia non impegnativa ma che ha saputo regalarmi davvero delle belle sensazioni.

Profile Image for Gribouille Lechat.
236 reviews6 followers
January 16, 2018
https://leslecturesdegribouille.blogs...

Je dois reconnaître que j'ai été agréablement surprise par cette romance très bien écrite et qui, pour une fois, était allégée en tergiversations et hésitations à n'en plus finir, ces petits défauts qui m'agacent toujours dans ce genre de livres, même si je sais qu'ils font partie de la règle du jeu.

Nous sommes en Angleterre en 1066, au lendemain de la bataille de Hastings, où se sont affrontées les troupes saxonnes du roi Harold et celles de Guillaume Le Conquérant, normandes (donc françaises). Les Normands ont gagné la bataille, et donc, le trône d'Angleterre, qui revient à Guillaume. Ils entrent à partir de là en conquérants en Angleterre, devenant les "méchants envahisseurs" pour tout le peuple saxon.

C'est dans ce contexte que commence le roman. Adam Wymark a reçu un domaine saxon en récompense de sa bravoure au combat et vient en prendre possession, ainsi que de la fille aînée de l'ancien seigneur des lieux (décédé pendant la bataille, de même que son fils), qu'il doit épouser par ordre du roi Guillaume. Mais quand il arrive au domaine, la fille en question a disparu, laissant "ses gens" livrés à eux-mêmes, car la veuve du seigneur est elle-même morte en couches quelques jours auparavant. En remontant la piste de la fugitive, Adam et ses hommes arrivent jusqu'à un monastère où vit la sœur cadette de celle-ci, Cecily.

Ayant demandé à lui parler dans l'espoir d'apprendre où s'est envolée sa promise, Adam se rend compte qu'il s'agit de la même jeune fille qu'il a aperçu un peu plus tôt, alors qu'elle se rendait au chevet d'une femme du village en train d'accoucher, et sous le charme de laquelle il est immédiatement tombé. De son côté, Cecily n'est pas indifférente non plus aux attraits d'Adam, mais c'est uniquement dans le but de protéger les gens de son domaine, mais aussi et surtout son petit frère nouveau-né qu'elle propose à Adam de remplacer sa sœur (mais bien sûr !). Car logiquement, elle s'imagine que ces cruels envahisseurs, agissant conformément à tous les cruels envahisseurs du monde, vont brutaliser les habitants et les serfs de son domaine, et tuer son petit frère, potentiel héritier légitime, s'ils découvrent son existence.

Adam ayant accepté de la ramener au domaine avec lui, Cecily quitte donc le couvent, et va découvrir, non sans surprise, que ce beau Normand n'est pas si méchant que ça (et même, beaucoup plus courtois et civilisé que de nombreux Saxons) et qu'elle se sent bien en sa présence, comme en sécurité. Adam, quant à lui, oscille entre l'envie de se rapprocher de cette jeune fille dont la fraîcheur et l'ingénuité le troublent au plus haut point, et la nécessité de rester sur ses gardes, au cas où cette innocence ne serait qu'une apparence pour mieux le tromper et le trahir auprès des rebelles saxons.

J'ai trouvé que le contexte historique était très bien rendu, ainsi que l'atmosphère de tension qui règne pendant cette période troublée. D'ailleurs, j'ai eu de suite envie d'en savoir un peu plus et de me documenter sur cet épisode de l'Histoire. La méfiance que ressentent les deux personnages principaux l'un vis-à-vis de l'autre est très crédible et s'explique parfaitement. Cependant, l'auteur s'est bien gardé d'en faire des tonnes de ce côté-là et c'est un des points que j'ai le plus apprécié. Ils se méfient l'un de l'autre, d'accord, mais avec intelligence. Ils relativisent beaucoup en constatant que les actes et les comportement de l'autre semblent démentir leurs craintes. D'ailleurs, leur entente et leur attirance immédiates et instinctives, au-delà de leurs différences et de leur doutes, rendent ce couple mignon comme tout et tous les moments qu'ils passent ensemble sont très agréables à lire.

Pris séparément, ces deux personnages sont également très sympathiques. Contrairement à d'habitude, je n'en ai pas aimé un plus que l'autre. Cecily est réellement adorable, que ce soit au niveau du caractère ou de la description physique qui en est faite. Blonde comme les blés avec des yeux bleu azur, les joues roses et le teint frais, son air de candeur et de douceur, elle offre un charmant portrait, que son caractère ne vient pas contredire. Elle est réellement gentille, dévouée à son prochain et pleine d'empathie pour autrui. Ce qui ne l'empêche pas d'être intelligente et de savoir ce qu'elle veut.

Adam, de son côté, est tout aussi parfait physiquement mais plus dans le style brun ténébreux. Son côté sombre et torturé par des souvenirs douloureux est contrebalancé par une vraie humanité et un tempérament chaleureux et ouvert. Alors qu'il croit son cœur fermé à jamais, il découvre que Cecily fait renaître en lui le goût de la vie et du bonheur, et son trouble, en révélant cette fragilité sous la carapace du guerrier viril et sûr de lui, le rendent complètement craquant. J'ai également apprécié que sous son commandement, aucune brutalité ne soit exercée à l'encontre des gens de son nouveau domaine, et qu'il ait l'intelligence de comprendre qu'il est dans son intérêt que son fief soit prospère et ses habitants heureux et bien portants. On sent qu'il sera un maître juste et tolérant, ce qui contribue à le rendre encore plus sympathique.

Côté style, j'ai trouvé la plume de l'auteure très agréable et fluide, et ses descriptions réalisées de main de maître, ce qui n'est pas toujours le cas avec ce type de romans, souvent réalisés "à la chaîne". Ici, on a la sensation de lire un vrai roman, écrit avec soin et avec talent. En peu de phrases, elle a l'art de nous faire visualiser parfaitement un lieu ou un personnage, nous immergeant plus encore dans son récit. Bref, on a là un roman bien écrit et bien construit tout en restant de la littérature "détente", pas prise de tête, et où tout est bien qui finit bien. Et finalement, n'est-ce pas exactement ce que l'on demande à la romance (historique ou pas)... ?


Conclusion : Une romance qui sort un peu du lot, très bien écrite, avec des personnages intelligents et attachants, et un contexte historique bien retranscrit. Une lecture vraiment agréable.
Profile Image for Hortensia.
345 reviews12 followers
May 22, 2016
Buena lectura, con ritmo, nada tediosa, con personajes con los que es fácil simpatizar.

Lo único que no me hace valorarla más alto, es que el final me pareció muy precipitado y fácil, como si el nudo hubiera estado sólo a medio hacer...
Y no sé si sea cosa de la traducción, pero se supone que "los bretones" eran un pueblo de Bretaña ¿y no sabían inglés? Y siendo los sajones de origen germánico ¿era su lengua natal? Eso no lo entiendo, habrá que estudiar más.

Profile Image for Sofia.
326 reviews64 followers
April 11, 2018
This book could have been much better, it had everything to be quite memorable, instead it left a bitter taste in my mouth.
The heroine was quite annoying, throughout the entire books she keeps secrets from her husband, for no reason other than it might make the plot more exciting. When actually it just made the book incredibly frustrating to read.
The heroine's sister falls into the 'useless, pathetic and annoying' secondary character category. Wish someone killed her along the way.
But what definitely made me feel bitter was the 'villain of the book', call me bloodthirsty, call me what you will, but why didn't anyone kill him? Hello, disgusting waste of human space, anyone?
For some reason the author decided that letting the villain escape was better. Let me tell you something, most girls don't want a man who is too sweet and lets everyone walk over him. We prefer someone who can be both sweet and scary when someone crosses him. I wish the Hero, Adam, would have grabbed his sword, like the knight he is, and chopped the head off the villain's shoulders. He had it coming, okay?
Profile Image for Mauser.
Author 2 books5 followers
August 4, 2017
Mamma mia che schifo questo romanzo!
Dopo averlo ritrovato sul fondo dei baule dei "dimenticabili" e averlo sfogliato mi è ripreso il ribrezzo di quando l'avevo tra le mani e lo stavo leggendo.
Un'autentica porcheria, sciatto, superficiale, per nulla credibile, un condensato dei peggiori cliché da romance da edicola, quelli su cui la maggior parte delle persone giudicano l'intero genere. Non è così, ma indubbiamente questo titolo concorre efficacemente ad affossare ulteriormente la categoria, come se le improponibili copertine dei Romanzi Mondadori non fossero già sufficienti di loro...
ATTENZIONE: non commettete il mio errore di credere che si tratti di una rivisitazione de La figlia del re, non lo è per niente, non ha né il trasporto né il coinvolgimento e tanto meno il pathos dell'altro volume, scritto da quel mostro sacro della Drake
Profile Image for The Book Coyote.
584 reviews8 followers
April 24, 2022
This was quite a good book. I enjoyed it a great deal. The author created the characters well, and made them both believable and sympathetic. You could understand the motivations of each of them and sympathised with their plights - while understanding at the same time what was keeping them apart. The plot was interesting and kept the book moving while not getting in the way of the romance - the most important part, of course. My one problem with this book was that they fell in love too quickly. Yes, this is a romance novel and all, but people just can't fall in love in a couple of days. I don't believe it. Also, I would have liked to hear more about Emma - her sister obviously had something going on with Judhael, and I would have liked to hear more about what went on between them and how he changed, etc. etc. Despite that, though, this was a good book and I'm glad I read it.
Profile Image for Notes From 'Round the Bend.
161 reviews5 followers
August 31, 2018
The writing was pretty good, and the concept was unique, but I swear to god if I had to read one more sentence about how the heroine's "life in the convent made her unused to men", I might just scream. She was a novice, in a convent full of women, for several years; we get it, thanks. You belabored that point about a hundred times too many.

I just feel that the author had an infinite field of possibility, and she didn't really take advantage of it. The climax was pretty blah (really, the "bad guy" gave in WAY too easily and quickly) and there was very little plot development. But, for a light, mindless distraction from everyday life, this wasn't so bad. I don't know that I'd highly recommend it, but I didn't hate it, either.
Profile Image for Annii .
244 reviews3 followers
August 29, 2013
This was quite a good book. I enjoyed it a great deal. The author created the characters well, and made them both believable and sympathetic. You could understand the motivations of each of them and sympathised with their plights - while understanding at the same time what was keeping them apart. The plot was interesting and kept the book moving while not getting in the way of the romance - the most important part, of course. My one problem with this book was that they fell in love too quickly. Yes, this is a romance novel and all, but people just can't fall in love in a couple of days. I don't believe it. Also, I would have liked to hear more about Emma - her sister obviously had something going on with Judhael, and I would have liked to hear more about what went on between them and how he changed, etc. etc. Despite that, though, this was a good book and I'm glad I read it.
Profile Image for Tasneem.
1,810 reviews
January 22, 2013
This was a well written book. Adam and Cecily were well thought of characters and the historical detail was interesting. I think I enjoyed the fact that it showed Adam struggling to learn English, to understand his new home and the people whose lives now depended upon him.
Profile Image for Ana Jazmín  Castro.
66 reviews
July 3, 2012
Una gran novela.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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