Georgette Heyer Fans discussion

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Sylvester or The Wicked Uncle
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Sylvester Group Read April 2017 Chapters 1-14

Please check in if you are reading along this time. Any first time readers? What format (kindle? Audio? Old paperback that was your mother's? Etc.) are you reading?

The line that I remembered best from my first read was Sylvester treating servants and employees well, as that made things easier and more proper. It shows that he's not nearly a bad guy - but he's missing something important. (Actually, there's another line I remember just as well - near the end of the book)

I'm reading the Sourcebooks trade-size paperback. It has the most insipid young woman on the cover. My very first read was back in 1969--the Ace pb with a very Doris Day-ish rendering of Phoebe wearing a very bad hat! I've re-read it a number of times over the years. However, it has been 5 or so years since my last re-read, so I am really looking forward to this group read.


I agree with you, Howard, about Sylvester’s character missing something important. He does remind me a bit of Darcy (given good principles, but left to follow them in pride and conceit, or however the confession goes at the end of Pride and Prejudice).



I've only read it once before, several years ago, so I can't wait to dive in with the group. Thanks for leading the discussion, Amy!


I'm only in chapter 4 so far and I can see where an audiobook performed by an actor who isn't wonderful with female voices would be missing a lot of the fun and humor. The scenes with Ianthe and 'Mama Duchess' (give me strength), Phoebe and her sisters and Miss Battery, Phoebe and Lady Marlow dominate the first few chapters, delightfully! Help me, group, I can't remember a Heyer that starts with such a female presence?! I felt we really see the POVs of both Sylvester and Phoebe, right from the beginning.


I'm amazed at how thoroughly we feel we know the characters after just a few chapters.



I do have some male stereotypes - such as finding Heyer's talking about fancy clothing more amusing than interesting. Her humor is what I like the best though. And I didn't start reading romances until 1. My wife almost died in a car accident. 2. Some of my favorite SF authors mentioned how much they like Heyer.


My DH likes to listen to her audiobooks. He, like our own dear Howard, enjoys the humor. He's a very diverse reader but tends towards the classics and likes how well the GH books are written.
His favorites have been The Grand Sophia and The Foundling.


I'm only in cha..."
the Convenient Marriage starts with Horatia and her sisters discussing their matrimonial prospects.



Howard wrote: "I think I like all of the romances other than Cousin Kate."
Thank you,Louise, you all are like Heyer encyclopedias, I look to you for ideas of what I might want to reread again, it's been so long for many of these titles.

I felt for Sylvester's mother - she clearly adores him and loved her husband and lost one beloved son already; I can't help thinking seeing such a character flaw revealed in her one remaining son would be emotionally devastating for her. Can't do anything once they are grown up, they aren't as likely to grow out of it!

Oh yes, her reaction just about broke my heart. For all that she doesn't have that many scenes in the book, she is my favorite character, by far.

I’m quite fond of Sibylla Battery. She’s such a sweetie, and really has the young people’s backs! Which they need, in that household.


Sylvester as a character is immediately revealed to us as a man who does the right things, for the wrong reasons. He is kind and courteous to his mother because he loves her. He is kind and courteous to everyone else because he knows it is in his best interests to do so.
In the same way, his self-centeredness is revealed in his decision to marry. Why? So that his mother will have a more congenial companion than Iante (where do these names come from! Heavens!). So that it will be socially acceptable and less confrontational for Ianthe to leave Edmund in his care.
He has no thought or intention of falling in love. He just wants someone who is well-bred and intelligent, who will not bore him. Sylvester is the original jaded hero, as his abhorrence of boredom is repeatedly emphasized in the opening chapter.
And, most maddening, he is absolutely confident that he can have his pick. The fact that this is very probably true makes it even more aggravating. As his Aunt Louisa says, "He knows his worth too well!"

That was very satisfying for us readers and for Sylvester, apparently!

Sylvester as a character is immediately revealed to us as a man who does the r..."
And I couldn't help feeling in the first few chapters that he was being set up for an almighty comeuppance - and I'm enjoying it immensely! Just beginning chapter 13.


Which ones? I'm wondering now whether I could get into SF (taking the opposite route as it were). I suppose that the creation of an internally consistent world is something that Heyer and SF authors share (as does Wodehouse).



She is the first one I came across (and she is my favorite author). Another one is Connie Willis (who also has written romance in SF - as in her 2016 novel "Crosstalk")

Rather like fairy tales of times gone by we see the wicked stepmother alive and well in this story.
The mother in The Grand Sophy was kind but scattered.
Arabella's mother was wonderful and kind but off stage for the book.
We never met Ancilla's or Waldo's mothers but based on description they were wonderful.
Mary's mother (The Devil's Cub) was awful but Dominic's was okay. (Opinions vary on Leonie!)
Pen's aunt was horrid.
Annis - can't remember? Was she okay?
Looks like mother's were a mixed bag. Am I forgetting any good ones?
Lots were dead - Abby, Sophy, Frederika, Kitty, Hero, Eustacie, Sally, and Annis.


I do like the Duchess. She seems kind and warm hearted. She has lost everyone she loved except her eldest son and now grandson and her health. She wants her son to experience the same happiness she had in her own marriage. Her companion is a stock Heyer character much like the annoying Maria in LoQ.
Poor Phoebe. I remembered she was neglected but not abused. The descriptions of what her Mama does to her when she doesn't obey are just hair raising. Her middle sister, Eliza (?), sounds a bit like Mary Bennet so far. I like Phoebe. She seems smart and is an independent thinker.
(view spoiler)

Sylvester is rude because he can get away with it, not because he's suffering from PTSD. Now Phoebe, whipped, confined to a fireless room and probably fed on bread and water was treated abominably, and she seems to have come through with humanity undamaged. If Tom had had a dead twin, I'm sure he would not be allowed to take it out on encroaching females, by setting out to make them fall in lave and then abandon them, their reputation ruined.
And that's as far as I can go withoutout spoilers.
I am rather pleased that the narrator Nicholas Rowe gives the Ordes country style accents - not uniform BBC English. Educated, but not stripped of local origins.

One of Heyer's strengths is that she is able to make very similar characters in similar plots different from each other.

I have a very busy month and a couple of books I need to finish though so I probably won't start my own re-read until Easter.

Very good points, Howard, you sum up Sylvester very well!

i don't like sylvester, i think he's a pain in the neck, but i don't think he has any intention of ruining Phoebe's reputation, he wants to make her fall in love with him, but has no intention of doing anything to compromise her that i can see. phoebe's treatment as a child seems severe, but she herself says that her stepmother was never unjust, and punishments such as she received were commonplace in her day.
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Books mentioned in this topic
Sylvester, or The Wicked Uncle (other topics)Rondo Allegro (other topics)
A Civil Campaign (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Lois McMaster Bujold (other topics)Lois McMaster Bujold (other topics)
Lois McMaster Bujold (other topics)
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