Georgette Heyer Fans discussion
Heyer in General
>
Your Bottom 5 Georgette Heyer's

"
No worries. It is taking me a long time because I'm reading online. Harry's writing style very readable!


Psst I've started a top 10 thread! :)

Psst I've started a top 10 thread! :)"
Thank you for make it a top 10, because I can't narrow it down to 5.

Thank you ..."
Sigh! I've just discovered I can't narrow it down to 10! But I tried!

Thank you ..."
Sigh! I've just discovered I can't narrow it down to 10! But I tried!"
I really can't, either. I don't believe we're meant to.


Susan, w..."
I struggle to limit myself to a mere top 5 Alathea! In no particular order:- Devil's Cub, These Old Shades, The Grand Sophy, Venetia, The Reluctant Widow, Frederica, An Infamous Army and Lady of Quality would all be close to the top!

Thank you ..."
Sigh! I've just discovered I can't narrow it down to 10! But I tried!"
Oh how fabulous! Thank you Carol!

Me, too, Howard! It's one of the reasons I get such a kick out of her mysteries - there's a lot of witty bantering in most of them.

4. Penhallow
5. The Spanish Bride

4. Penhallow
5. The Spanish Bride"
I'm in the serious minority, but I really like Penhallow. It's completely different from any other of her books, but I like the theme and the character studies. It's not light and witty, but it's got substance.

I'm in the serious minority, .."
I'm starting to feel like I'm in the minority with Beauvallet! It wasn't a 5★ read for me but I did like it!

I'm in the serious minority, .."
I'm starting to feel like I'm in the minority with Beauvallet! It wasn't a 5★ read for me but I did like it!"
Beauvallet has never come my way, oddly enough, so I've never got to weigh in on it!

The main character was rather like a hero out of a swashbuckling Dumas saga!

The main character was rather like a hero out of a swash..."
I always thought it was disliked because of it had a dull hero!

The main character was rather like a hero out of a swash..."
Most of her characters aren't as bigoted as their contemporaries. That makes them more acceptable to a modern audience. But there are limits.

The main character was rather like a ..."
If you take many of the heroes and heroines and put them straight into today's world, they might not be so very likable. But if you take those characters, and imagine them growing up today, they would be very different people.

The main character was..."
One of my favorite occupations while at the grocery store is imagining other people as children...



Re: conversation about changing times - one of my favorite Christie books is And Then There Were None. I do not specifically recall anything offensive inside the book. No, the offensive comes from the book's original title (which was not, despite it currently being labeled as being the original title on Goodreads, Ten Little Indians - no the original title was actually - well, I'd rather link to Wikipedia).

Without looking it up, I know which word you're referring to, and I completely agree! I told my father-in-law a few years back (oh, my, it was actually decades) that I'd rather he use any other word in front of the kids than that one. Or in front of me, for that matter. We didn't often see eye-to-eye, but we really disagreed on language.
And, it's odd, but often that word isn't necessarily meant as an insult in those old books, but rather just a description - sometimes even a sort of back-hand compliment. Times they do change...




Ah, hadn't gotten far enough in the book to actually encounter any servants or lower classes . . . I think. Been a while since I tried to read that book.


That's the sum total of what I remember about the book.

That's a great synopsis! Now I know I have to read it! (and it really does sound like Captain Blood with Errol Flynn).

most English people were anti Spanish in the late Elizabethan era, we were at war with Spain, and moreover they were catholics, and England was becoming very strongly anti catholic at this time, especially since the pope had excommunicated Queen elizabeth and said it was all right to kill her, which did not help.

Ah, hadn't gotten far enough ..."
generally there was a more relaxed attitude towards servants and lower class people than in later eras. Servants for instance were generally regarded as junior members of the family. being a servant was not considered demeaning, even young people from upper class families might serve as pages for instance. A good book on this subject is Masters and Servants in Tudor England by Alison Sim.

Ah, hadn't gotte..."
I was just thinking how being a servant was often referred to as "obliging" in a lot of older books, as in, "Our neighbor Mrs. Smith obliges on Tuesdays and Thursdays." Interesting!

1 Helen
2 My Lord John
3 Why Shoot a Butler?
4 Barren Corn
5 Royal Escape
I've put Barren Corn. I've put it ahead of Royal Escape as I haven't read RE in a very long time.


You have convinced me to avoid her contemporaries!
I haven't seen anything good about them."
Ha! Barren Corn was quite a good book - just depressing & with very outdated values. Helen is a very bad book indeed.

Oh yes! Boy is it ever about knowing your place! But (view spoiler)

I think in her biography, the writer said that Georgette Heyer was an Edwardian.
I wonder what she would think of some of the marriages of QE2's children (Charles & Diana & Camilla; Wills & Kate etc.? They sure didn't marry other royals.

Royals aren't available. She certainly wouldn't expect them to marry into the Thai or Japanese royal families.
Books mentioned in this topic
Barren Corn (other topics)Barren Corn (other topics)
The Sound and the Fury (other topics)
Ten Little Indians (other topics)
And Then There Were None (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Georgette Heyer (other topics)Georgette Heyer (other topics)
Susan, w..."
A Civil Contract and Cotillion are in my favorites, and so are Frederica and Reluctant Widow. You're both my best friends!