I voluntarily read and reviewed an advanced copy of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own
One isn’t aware of how valuable something or someone is until one loses them.
That could be a very brief yet very accurate summarize of “Her Wicked Marquess”. But that wouldn’t be an appropriate review of it, it’s too short, let’s get into detail.
Hester Green belongs to a family of actors, directors, costume designers… who own a little independent theatre in London. She is an actress herself but she’s been off the stage for a year, she stopped acting the moment she accepted to be the Marquess of Worcester’s mistress. But now that Drake is rumored to have a proper betrothed, a duke’s daughter on top of that, she’s left him and everything he’s given to her behind and therefore goes back to her family.
But Drake, who has been faithful to her like he hasn’t been to any other woman before her, isn’t willing to accept that. He is set on getting her back in his bed and in his life… after all, the betrothal was simply his mother’s trick to get him married and settled once and of all, it’s not what he really wants. In order to get Hester back he invests a lot of money on her next play at the theatre on the condition that he will be the director of said play.
But Hester knows that even if the betrothal isn’t real this time, Drake is meant to be betrothed and married to a lady of the ton. Titled men don’t marry mistresses do they?
Warning: this book is a page-turner. It is exciting, thought-provoking and quite steamy in my opinion.
When I read the synopsis the first thing I thought was that the plot sounded quite original. I don’t think I have ever read a romance about a man and his mistress from the point of view of the mistress. Don’t get me wrong, this book isn’t written in the first person be not afraid. It is the description of life as a woman who warms the bed of a man for a time (be it months, be it years) and in the meanwhile being given a house, servants, jewels, you name it… and knowing that all of that is temporary, like all those things were rented and the rental being paid with one’s body. And Hester has so much dignity about it, you get to really know what kind of woman she is when she refuses to keep anything Drake has given her, no matter how much he insists that they belonged to her whatever happens.
Hester is a feminist, she’s well aware of who and what she is. She’s not the kind of woman who go on the streets fighting for women’s suffrage, it was too early for that yet. But if you read carefully, everything she says and thinks is about women’s situation, mistresses, actresses, wives… Hester refuses to be taken for anything less than a man, she’s amazing. And the best part is that Drake takes everything she says in a very natural way, because his Hester is brave. Actually Drake is a very uncommon man in the sense that he never degrades or despises Hester for being a woman. The fight, they argue, but he never ever thinks less of her for her gender. I loved them for all that.
The pair of idiots love each other, they’ve been in love right from the start when he met her a year ago. But they’re also aware of the circumstances and the differences in rank. Also, they are both very proud people, it takes time for them to recognize, even to themselves, that they’re in love. You can see that when Hester recalls moments in their relationship and you understand that the only difference between them and a married couple is that they live in separate houses. They have many things in common and they enjoyed them together: long talks about the arts, music, meetings with painters, poets, musicians… they find comfort in each other’s company and they set the bed on fire after that.
What they’re not aware of is that there is someone else behind the curtain, someone without good intentions. Even if we know that the couple will have their happy ending we can’t help but feel uncomfortable and worried. When said someone insisted on the betrothal I knew their true motivations before the writer put them on paper. However these scenes lead to another refreshing fact about the novel; they talk! When either of them has a serious problem or some kind of trouble they talk. Even if they are at odds. So in conclusion; it was predictable but the outcome satisfied me as a reader.
As a whole, I throughly enjoyed this book. I had read another Lisa Torquay book before and I liked it, but this one is much better, it’s more thought-provoking than that book and more feminist and egalitarian so to speak. But the fact that this book is better in terms of subjects and plot means that the next is likely to be even better than this one. As they say, the best is yet to come.