Georgette Heyer Fans discussion

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Cotillion
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Cotillion October 2018 Group Read Chapters 1-10
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Critterbee❇
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Oct 05, 2018 07:45AM

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Oh that is funny! And just like Freddy to exclaim about that!

also, when Lady Legerwood in chapter six says "my Benjamin so ill" - she must be talking about Edmund; doesn't that sound like a mistake? there are just six children: Meg, Freddy, Charlie, Edmund, Fanny and Caroline.
as long as I am nit-picking (because, really, it's the best book ever I don't care what nits I come across) Freddy plans to ask Kitty if she's had the measles but never actually does. it must happen "off camera"!


Last night I laughed all the way through the part where Freddy meets Fish. I think you are right to read it as a comedy!

Ferdy is amusing but I prefer Dolph.

Ferdy is amusing but I..."
I didn't remember that about Gilly!

Fer..."
Oh, that’s right - that’s why his uncle and servants were so protective- he had been a sickly child.

Dolph may or may not have been a preemie. However, to me he is obviously intellectually challenged and somewhere on the autism spectrum. His hideous mother sure isn't helping him any. But her behavior is not the sole cause of his differences. Loving parents can do only so much...

This is the first Heyer book I read (in Dec 2012): I had no idea who she was back then. It was a pleasant discovery and I rated it 3.5 stars (3 here because we don't have half stars).
I am a bit "strict" in my ratings and I rarely give 5 stars: they have to be books I consider real masterpieces and/or books I literally cannot put down. To be honest, I don't think Heyer wrote masterpieces of literature (no offence meant, I don't even think that was her aim), so I was rating according to my scale (a "good" book).
But "Cotillion" ranks so far above all her other books I've read so far, and I have such fond memories of it (that I hope to relive now rereading), that I think it's only fair that I up my vote to 4 stars now.

I find myself giving books categories in my mind and then rating them within that category. So some trashy e-book-only erotica will get 5 stars, because it's a perfect example of the trashy erotica genre. Meanwhile I'm giving Margaret Atwood's early work 2 stars because it's only quite good literary fiction!
Heyer is in a category all of her own. The best Heyer's get 5 stars. The worst get 2 or 3 (because they're never bad). Even though a 2 star Heyer is better than a 5 star generic regency romance!


I just finished my re-read of Cotillion last night. This is one that I have read many times as it is a paperback that I own. This reading was a kindle copy as my paperbacks are old and well read. Cotillion is one of my favourite re-reads, and Freddy one of my favourite heroes.


That sounds like a book that falls into the "does what it sets out to do and does it well" category. Isn't it the main goal of a thriller writer to keep you up until 4 a.m.? :)

One thing that struck in this rereading, I didn't remember there was all this talk of Hugh. His name comes up a lot in the conversations for a character (view spoiler) . He's so well fleshed out it makes me regret we don't have the stories of ALL the lovely characters in this book even more.


Mary Bennet! Naw, she just wants to show off... The rest of the possibles have already found someone. But would Charlotte have traded in her Mr. Collins for Hugh, I wonder.

Mary Bennet! Naw, she just wants to show off... The rest..."
I think Charlotte would def trade in Mr. Collins for Hugh! I think Hugh is a much more agreeable match myself.

Mary Bennet! Naw, she just wants to show..."
Hugh, for all his pomposity, is intelligent and even kind - and he doesn't come with a proud and condescending patroness! 😁


I ran into the word "bedizened" in Anne of Green Gables! I had just looked it up from reading it in Cotillion!

I just ran into the word "bedizened" in Anne of Green Gables! I just looked it up from reading it in Cotillion!"
I just ran into the word bedizened in Death in the Dentist's Chair I'm just going to have to fit it into conversations now! :D


Well, 'bedizen' seems to have the same general meaning (and pronunciation) as 'bedazzle'. So, Karlyne, pile on the Christmas theme brooches, add those sparkling earbobs and flaunt it to the max!

I would read Hugh's story! :-) I don't know, it's weird, it's almost like she's setting up the path for a spinoff/sequel, that was never written.
But also, of course, Hugh has to be more than "stiff and preachy Rector" to explain the (view spoiler) .
Karlyne wrote: "Hugh, for all his pomposity, is intelligent and even kind"
One of my top moments in the book is at the end (view spoiler)

Come to think of it, what Hugh really needs is a Lizzy Bennet to tease him out of his stiff formality and pop his formality. I bet he'd be a lot less stiff and preachy if he had a wife to mock him every time he got on his high horse.


A beautiful phrase, Karlyne!

A beautiful phrase, Karlyne!"
Thanks!

And Freddy and his father, on (view spoiler) :
"These unsuspected depths, Frederick -- ! I have wronged you!"
"Oh, I don't know that, sir! ... I ain't clever ... but I ain't such a sapskull as you think!"
"I have always known you could not be, my dear boy."
LOL!

Deck the halls - and Karlyne! 🤣

I love that exchange!

I think I'll have to make a video...😁
Jackie wrote: "Lord Legerwood is so funny!"
Yes, he's a very unusual Heyer character, isn't he? We very rarely see a male protagonist's father, because usually he himself is the holder of the title, so his father has to be out of the way.
There's Charity Girl where the old boy is the typical crusty gout-ridden patriarch, The Grand Sophy where he's a typical hard-drinking, hard-gambling Georgian waster, and of course Devil's Cub and The Masqueraders where the fathers are also unique characters. It's nice to see for once an obviously kind and loving father, with intelligence and a sense of humour. I'd have married him myself!
Yes, he's a very unusual Heyer character, isn't he? We very rarely see a male protagonist's father, because usually he himself is the holder of the title, so his father has to be out of the way.
There's Charity Girl where the old boy is the typical crusty gout-ridden patriarch, The Grand Sophy where he's a typical hard-drinking, hard-gambling Georgian waster, and of course Devil's Cub and The Masqueraders where the fathers are also unique characters. It's nice to see for once an obviously kind and loving father, with intelligence and a sense of humour. I'd have married him myself!

I agree, though, he is a keeper."
Hands off, ladies, Lord Legerwood is mine! ; )
Critterbee❇ wrote: "Dang, you're the first to claim him, so I guess you have 'dibs'!"
Excuse me! I saw him first!
Excuse me! I saw him first!

Yes, he's a very unusual Heyer character, isn't he? We very rarely see a male protagonist's father, because usually he himself is the holder of the titl..."
Agree - it's like the Childrens book convention where parents have to be absent for adventures to occur!
That said, having set the standard with Avon, I'm glad she only had Lord Legerwood as an other good example :) (Nothing displaces Avon my my mind!) She does use parenting-as-a-humanizer as a plot device for some of her male protags though - Alverstoke, Sylvester, Charles, Dameral - all perform various levels of parental roles.
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