Georgette Heyer Fans discussion

This topic is about
Beauvallet
Group Reads
>
Beauvallet November 2017 Group Read Spoiler thread
message 1:
by
Carol She's So Novel꧁꧂
(new)
-
rated it 4 stars
Nov 01, 2017 12:48AM

reply
|
flag

BTW, the movie has several plot points in common with GH's book, but not enough to believe the movie is based on it.
I heartily recommend the movie to fans of the book--great swashbuckling adventure, a sweet romance, and a sword duel!
Must have a sword duel...


I was so unclear in my last comment. Sabitini's Sea Hawk is NOT the basis for the 1940 movie of the same title (though it is a fabulous story that should have been made into a movie). Anyhoo, I was trying to recommend the movie to readers of Beauvallet--I should have said 'our book' instead of 'the book'.
Sorry for the confusion...

All the guff about Simon the Coldheart (quite a bit in a short book) must have made very little sense to readers when S the C was suppressed.
Since I read Beauvallet first I must have just skimmed that part.

All the guff about Simon the Coldheart (quite a bit in a short book) must have made very little sense to readers when S the C was suppressed.
Since I read B..."
Likewise, I read 'Beauvallet' years before 'Simon'. I thought she was just nattering on about an important ancestor and just kept reading. Of course, the 'aha!' moment came when I read 'Simon' for the first time...

Douglas Fairbanks junior swashed a few buckles though,didn't he?
I always picture Beauvallet with lighter coloured hair because of Fairbanks & Flynn. GH quite definitely gives him black hair & I had to curb my wayward imagination.
I've finished & from when Beauvallet entered Spain on it is a 5★ read.
GH was still a young writer then. If she was older I think she would have gone back & made the use of language more consistent. There was too much Beauvallet family background, which was just baffling if you first read when StheC was suppressed. I knew about StheC because my father was trying so hard to find a copy, but most readers would have been baffled.
& yeah, yeah I know - Nick gave his word, honour blah, blah but I found the falling in love risking not only his own life, but his crews, his ship & even Dominica's to put her & her father on Spanish soil, when they are already in love & she is a heretic- too quixotic for me.
Still a very strong 4★ for me - maybe 4.5★. i'm still pondering.


He was definitely eccentric, crazy, thrill seeking, etc. Today he would be trying to circumnavigate in a hot air balloon, or parachuting from the outer atmosphere.

I think Beauvallet makes more sense if you have read Simon first - only because Beauvallet includes so much (for a very short book)family history.
Simon isn't GH's best book but it isn't her worst either.


I think Beauvallet makes more sense if you have read Simon first - only because Beauvallet includes so much (for a very short book)..."
I must respectfully disagree--Nick Beauvallet's relationship to Simon has close to nothing to do with his seafaring career nor with his adventures in Spain nor his romance with Dominica. Look on the few bits of family background as an 'Easter Egg' for those who have already read 'Simon'.
Truly--my Arrow edition is 262 pages long and has approx 5 pages of Simon focused material, if that.
Carol--I know you have a very old Heinemann edition. Do you think any editing has been done over the years? I know we readers often have different interpretations of the characters' motivation and personality--but it is very rare that we disagree about the actual words on the page...

I'm reminded that in The Toll-Gate, Jack Staple's man, Cocking, starts out as an interesting character along the same lines, but then pretty much disappears from the story. Fortunately, Dimmock stays front and center.


Yes, Sancia is from Grand Sophy, indolent, sleepy, reposed, golden and magnificent. Sancia was not very bright, where Beatrice is cunning. And Sancia was not cruel, like Beatrice.
But, I am biased, I loved Sancia.
"'No one, said the Marquesa, with decision, 'shall shoot a pistol, because it is of all things what I most detest, and, besides, it is more important that we should prepare dinner!' "
❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤


But also, how she was treated might offer protection from the King and the Inquisition. She obviously was an injured party, unaware of the duplicity of her niece, etc

But also, how she was treated might offer p..."
Thank you, I had forgotten about the money; I agree, she will mourn that loss more than her son.

The opening naval battle and ship-boarding bears a great resemblance to the opening scenes of Flynn's 1940 film 'The Sea Hawk'. I can easily picture Nick, in his Chevalier du Guise persona, chatting with the king of Spain. His clever escape from the prison is straight out of Hollywood. The cross-country escape/rescue of Dominica/sword fight with Diego--Quite frankly, I do not know why it was never made into a movie. GH was most likely familiar with Douglas Fairbanks Sr's swashbuckler movies of the '20s when she wrote this and it shows. (the bit at the beginning of Nick's fight with Don Diego, when he bends his rapier--straight out of any number of movies of the era. I know, I've seen most of them--though usually it is the bad guy (often played by Basil Rathbone) who did it, not the hero).
Of all of her books, this is the one that most relies on action (rather than witty dialogue) to propel the story.
Anyway, a rather roundabout way to say that I love the book, not so much for the actual words on the page, but for the movie those words project in my mind.


I read an internet article recently about these mental movies. It was fascinating. Apparently not all readers visualize the same way.

I'm with you there--maybe one of the Chris crew(Evans, Pine, Pratt, Hemsworth). All have shown they can do the action and the comedy, but how are any of them with a sword in their hands?
Sigh... back to picturing Errol Flynn...

Ha! The Chris crew!

I read an internet article recently about these me..."
I think that’s why I love reading over a lot of movies- you can cast them in your head and visualize as you please!

I have an Arrow copy of Beauvallet but it may take me a few days to check.

I have an Arrow copy of Beauvallet but it may take me a few..."
Thanks, Carol. I, for one, sure would appreciate it, as it felt as if you had read one book and I had read a different book, but with the same title and general plot.

I haven't read Simon The Coldheart so I can safely say that you don't need to have read it to enjoy this one.
And I'm voting for Chris Hemsworth to play Nick. He's got the right amount of carefree, eye-twinkling.

I felt the same as our Nick (from Cambridge, not Beauvallet) about the book, but it was my first read and I’m glad I finished. Agreed, you don’t need to read Simon to get this story - never read that one, either.
I’m not very hip, but isn’t hemsworth the one who plays Thor? Yes, I agree he’d make a good Beauvallet. What about Tom Hiddleston, he’s already British, which is handy. Every time I see his face, I feel like he looks like he stepped out of an old portrait of some English baron or lord, he just has that aristocratic, old-fashioned look about him (mind you I’m a middle-aged American, what the heck do i know?)

However, we went to see Thor-Ragnarok last night and Chris Hemsworth would also be terrific as a more beefcake-y Nick.

However, we went to see Thor-R..."
Oh, yes, Benedict would be a great choice!

I haven't read Simon to the best of my memory (although I suspect I have eons ago). The references to him and the family didn't make any difference to the story for me as it was just a bit of family background. Maybe if you had already read Simon and were very familiar with his story, as Carol is, it might have made a difference?

Tom Hiddleston would be perfect!


You are right Susan!

how did the language seem to change, can you be more specific? I'm not yet halfway though so I want to watch for it




Thanks Kim, my mom used to be my personal search engine - many times in the past two years I’ve thought, “I have to ask Mom about...” it’s tough. My son is like that with accents - made him very versatile when he turned his hand from cross country to theater senior year in high school!
Yes, that plummy accent of Grant is what I had in mind for our casting of Beauvallet!

I think that people who have lived in different places pick up a little of the speech mannerisms / accents from every place that they live. It is helpful for effective communication.
My cousins from New York think I have British accent ( I do not). When I lived in the south (USA), people thought I had a Northern USA accent. Everywhere I live, because I do not speak exactly like locals, people think that I have an accent. I think I just have a neutral American accent.


Also, since my college days as a Spanish major, I have had a fondness for Spanish history and culture. What a special thrill it was for me this summer to get to visit Spain with my husband! I didn't get to all the locations of the story but we did visit El Escorial, where we saw Philip's reception room and his spartan apartments there, with a window beside his bed overlooking the altar of the church. We also had more than one pleasant stroll down Madrid's Calle Mayor. Good memories!


Teresa, I sympathize. Try a comfort read, or a holiday short story. I find that when I'm stressed/tired/sick, it is useless for me to try to read anything new. Hang in there...
Books mentioned in this topic
Beauvallet (other topics)Simon the Coldheart (other topics)