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Katherine
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Mar 09, 2011 03:17PM


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What you said!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! My first status update is at page 15 already asking if there's going to be an HEA.

KATHERINE- I read to, I think page 130 before I filed it in the "to sell" basket. Just couldn't deal with it for some reason. Thats the second time I have bought a book for a group read and didn't finish it.

Now I'm starting



There was a brief mention of Leo I think in her version of the Scarlet Pimpernel (His at Night). I saw her comments at the back too but I didn't think it linked to Private Arrangements but admittedly I read that a while ago.
So - if you've got to the back- how did you find it?

Thanks for the info.

The original inspiration for NOT QUITE A HUSBAND comes from the 2007 movie The Painted Veil, starring Naomi Watts and Edward Norton. The story of The Painted Veil is that of a marriage in real trouble, a couple very much estranged who travel to the dangerous interior of China at a time of cholera outbreaks. It is one of the best romantic dramas Sherry has ever seen—she views it as a Laura Kinsale film, with complex characters, dark emotional conflict, great sexual tension, and a gorgeous backdrop. And she loved, loved, loved it up until the very end when SPOILER.... the hero dies!....END SPOILER. She came out of the movie theater shellshocked, and on the spot decided that she would write her own version of the story as her next project and give it the happy ending it so deeply merited.
Also on the spot, outside the movie theater, she made the first story choice: to reverse the gender roles—no point writing exactly the same story. In The Painted Veil, the romantic pairing is between a rather socially awkward microbiologist and the beautiful socialite he somehow manages to marry. In NOT QUITE A HUSBAND, the hero is instead the popular, desirable figure, and the heroine a socially awkward physician who somehow manages to marry him. And then, to distinguish this book from PRIVATE ARRANGEMENTS, which was also about a troubled marriage, she decided to annul Leo and Bryony's marriage at the beginning of the book, so that when they meet again, they are not an estranged couple—they are not a couple at all.
Now she needed a setting. China was taken out of consideration—again, she didn't want to slavishly copy The Painted Veil. But where? First, it needed to be some place far away from England—this relationship had ended so badly that any initial reconciliation could only happen far, far away. Second, this place had to have been dangerous at the end of the 19th century. And since Sherry has determined that the hero of NOT QUITE A HUSBAND should be DELICIOUS's Will Marsden's youngest brother, she was further restricted in the time period. Will Marsden marries at the very end of 1892. Leo Marsden comes to London in the spring of 1893 to meet his new sister-in-law, marries during that same year,then has his marriage annulled in 1894. Now the story could be set earliest in 1895 and latest in 1899—Sherry wasn't going to try a 20th century-set story until she had a little more name recognition under her belt.
![ᑭᑌᑎƳᗩ [Punya Reviews...] (sadeyes) | 241 comments](https://images.gr-assets.com/users/1572968006p1/3840999.jpg)
Marsden brothers in order (for fun only! :p):
1. Jeremy (the Earl)
2. Charlie
3. Will
4. Matthew
5. Leo (he's the half brother, a result of his mother's affair, which is explained in NQaH)







Finished Fifth Day Of Christmas and Willing (Mercenary/Goddard Project, #4). Currently reading In Pursuit of a Scandalous Lady.
![ᑭᑌᑎƳᗩ [Punya Reviews...] (sadeyes) | 241 comments](https://images.gr-assets.com/users/1572968006p1/3840999.jpg)






I love the movie version of The Painted Veil, not just for the dramatic storyline, but because Edward Norton's character is a microbiologist as I am. I decided to read the book so I suggested it to my book club this year...I think we're reading it in July with me leading the discussion. I'll have to read A Horseman on the Roof now, too.


Just started


Just started

well, that was my least fave of the series. the first 3 were all slowpaced and yes, I would know since I read the 4th bk already


I cant wait for

ps: yep, GS was my first.. and it was very funny how i bumped into that. brief post of first read. if u have time to check it out!
-what romance i enjoy now? mmm.. i think Historical will always be my first love. then contemporary. Im not too good with the chick-lit genre tho.. but i read some.
finished








..love Charlotte Featherstone's writing and I can't wait to read this story!"
I'm looking forward to reading your thoughts on it, Lady H.

Ready to be kicked off the forum now :-P"
Oh whatever!!! It's not a requirement that you love her above all else! Besides, where would we get our abundance of accurate info from? You're a font of useFUL info!
Variety is the spice of life...right?





Breathless is on my next list from Amazon.
Is Jo Goodman any good guys? If so where to start?

AMAR- I loev the POV she rights from...I laugh right out loud and my hubby and kids look at me like I've grown another head on my shoulders or something! They don't understand how I can laugh at a book!Nothing But Trouble cracked me up, I laughed so hard. It was like RG has listened to conversations between my hubby and I! CRAZY!




let me know how this is, k????"
So far, it's good. Only read 1 chapter, but it has me crackin' up and I already love Houston!

Variety is the spice of life...right?
"
Thanks, Bekah.

Alright Seton, tell me which MH book is the best so I can read that next?"
I dunno. Depends on ur taste.
If u like medievals, BY DESIGN is an unusual one because it's a romance between a mason and a tiler. The hero in that is especially yummy.
My favorite regency of hers is RULES OF SEDUCTION. The heroine is plain, smart, and strong-willed and the hero falls pretty hard for her.

Is Jo Goodman any good guys? If so where to start?"
I think u might find her interesting. She writes serious, slow-paced, meaty HRs with intelligent H/h and clever dialogue and a good bit of steam.
My biggest complaint about her is I often find her pacing to be deadly slow and she is kinda fixated on the tortured or damaged heroine every single time.
The bk of hers I liked the best was The Price Of Desire. Just be aware that it's really dark.
Whatever u pick, I recommend u stick with her last 8 bks. She is one of those authors - like LK - whose writing had gotten better with age & experience.

Yes! i thought the same thing .. "A lot like love" was not as engaging, but i still gave it 4 stars because the dialogues were so funny! i still have to review it tho!.- ***huggs*** back at you! :)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
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