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Book Reviews - Romance, Fantasy, Science Fiction - By an Adult for Adults

A Spanish Honeymoon, Romance by Anne Weale

February 28, 2020 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I’ve been looking for romance authors who write books with interesting characters and a sense of immediacy and warmth, similar to my favorite Betty Neels. Anne Weale is another English author who wrote novels published from 1955 to about 2000, and like Betty Neels had a separate, successful career. Anne Weale is the pseudonym for Jay Blakeney, a reporter who also wrote as Andrea Blake. The first romance I read by her, A Marriage Has Been Arranged, was OK so I got a few of her other novels.

A Spanish Honeymoon features a likable leading lady, Liz, and her new neighbor, the glamorous reporter Cam. Liz is a widow. She married very young and her husband has been dead for 4 years; now she lives in a small Spanish town and earns her living as a needlework designer. Cam is about ready to settle down and finds Liz delightful.

A Spanish Honeymoon has some good points: The descriptions of small Spanish towns feels real and attractive, Liz is independent in mind and approach. On the less appealing side Cam gives a couple lectures about current social views, e.g., shouldn’t spend money on this or that but give to the poor, atheist, water policies. Even one of these is a bit jarring in a romance.

Liz had 13 years of unenjoyable lovemaking in her first marriage and this causes the main conflict in the novel, will she be able to have a satisfying physical relationship with her new husband.

My biggest issue with this novel is the focus on sex and the expectation that people should sleep together before marriage. Our heroine feels there is something wrong with her that she is not sleeping around. Look, just because many, or even most people, do sleep together before marriage does not mean it is right, wise or required.

Nonetheless, I did finish the novel and found it worth 3 Stars. Be aware there are some semi-explicit scenes.

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Filed Under: Romance Fiction Tagged With: Romance, Romance Novels

Never Say Goodbye – Betty Neels English Romance, with Poland and Stockholm Too

January 26, 2020 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Betty Neels sent her heroines and their RDD/RBD (rich Dutch or British doctors) all over Europe; to the Netherlands, naturally, Spain, Portugal, the Canary Islands, Norway, passing through France, Bosnia, Scotland, Austria, Switzerland. Of course the RDD/RBD also go to Belgium and even America, but without their sweeties. Never Say Goodbye is the only one with a trip to Poland via Stockholm. It is set in 1983 when Poland was pushing for independence from the USSR, the year Lech Walesa won the Nobel Peace Prize, so it has a bit more tension and risk than most Betty trips.

Dr. Thomas Winter has finally secured permission to bring his old nanny, a dissident’s widow, back to England. He needs a nurse – now – to come along because Nanny is nearly crippled with arthritis. In walks Isobel Barrington, private nurse. Thomas doesn’t think Isobel is suitable but she’s the only one available so he makes do.

Things are tense in Poland and Thomas distracts Nanny and Isobel with an organ concert and last sightseeing. Everyone breathes easier once on the boat headed back to Stockholm. Isobel stays with Nanny for a week or so, then heads off to new private clients. Thomas rounds her back to nurse Nanny after pneumonia, even taking them (and Isobel’s family) to his seaside cottage.

This is a Betty Neels book meaning it we don’t get a lot of insight into the RBD. Thomas clearly likes Isobel by the time they return to Stockholm, but it’s not clear when he falls in love with her. Isobel is the primary character and we see her feelings for Thomas and her distress and fear when her mom has a stroke. The family is just barely making it with her generous private pay; if she cannot work they will have serious problems. Thomas insists on bringing her mother to his private rehab place, and further insists on taking Isobel’s cat and dog to his home.

Ella Stokes, an expensive blonde vision whom Thomas only slightly likes, is the other woman. Ella spikes her own guns by following Dr. Winter on holiday and “clinging like a limpet”. I think having Ella around helped Thomas find emotional clarity and realize he loves Isobel.

Never Say Goodbye is one of Betty Neels’ most enjoyable books; I think the Polish situation adds piquancy and the love affair is low key, builds slowly and feels real. Some of Neels’ RDD/RBBs are over-the-top but Dr. Thomas Winter is definitely rich yet all too human. He’s lonely without realizing how lonely he is and he wants, he wants, but he isn’t sure what he wants. Eventually he realizes it is Isobel, a family and love. Proposal and kisses ensue.

Filed Under: Romance Fiction Tagged With: Betty Neels, Clean Romance, Romance, Romance Novels

Pineapple Girl – Betty Neels English Romance

January 24, 2020 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Pineapple Girl is a Type 2 Betty Neels romance, a courtship/love story complicated by The Other Woman. There are some really neat moments, especially towards the end when heroine Eloise Bennett saves a young boy, but overall it is one of Betty’s less memorable novels.

Eloise’s mom’s old friend Deborah Pringle lives in (guess) Holland and is dying. She asks Eloise to come to their home to give her care and company during her final illness. Naturally Timon van Zeilst is Mevrouw Pringle’s physician and he is just as interested in Eloise as she is in him.

A patient gives nurse Eloise a pineapple, which she promptly drops on consultant Timon van Zeilst, visiting from (of course) Holland. Eloise thinks Timon looks like someone she’d like to know, but he is in Holland and she is in England, it isn’t likely so she tries to put him out of her mind.

The complication is Liske, a young, very beautiful, very expensive socialite and Timon’s girlfriend. Liske isn’t giving up Timon without a fight! She dates Timon several times while Eloise is around, she drops into Timon’s home and acts as though marriage is a foregone conclusion.

Timon is quite silly. He dates Liske long after he knows that he doesn’t want to marry her. He isn’t completely sure he wants Eloise so he dates her too, albeit usually with Mr. Pringle and other friends or family. He finally calls it quits with Liske; as near as I can tell it’s about 5 dates past the point where he should have done the just-friends/had-fun-but-not-serious routine.

Timon feels terrible when he finally dumps Liske, says he was cruel to her, so Liske runs over to his house when Eloise is there and dumps all over Eloise, maneuvering to make it look like Eloise was extraordinarily nasty. Timon, being a RDD and thus not tuned into how low a girl like Liske would go to ensnare his plump pocket, rips into Eloise for being cruel. Eloise runs into the driving rainstorm where Timon finds her, again berates her for being mean, then she packs up and leaves for England as soon as possible.

Eventually Timon rescues Eloise when she is busy rescuing a small boy and takes her off to be married in the church down the street. This is the part that lost me. Last we saw Timon he was beating up himself and Eloise for “being cruel to poor Liske”, and next time we see him he’s got a special license and a date with the parson and a room at the closest inn.

I understand he wants to marry Eloise and she wants to marry him, but really, wouldn’t you expect just a bit more something between accusations of cruelty and marrying out of hand? Also, what gives with Eloise? She wants to marry Timon and it’s romantic as heck to sweep down and dash off to the nearest church, but I bet she’d later regret not having her Mom or anyone else around.

Not sure why I didn’t like Pineapple Girl more. The plot is decent, we see a bit of Holland, Eloise and Liske have pretty clothes and Timon is pretty classy. But it just doesn’t hang together. Harlequin republished Pineapple Girl in a collector’s edition with a red cover and new picture, so it’s obviously popular. I think the characters don’t seem like real people to me. Betty Neels was known for her warmth and believable characters and this book just doesn’t quite get there. It feels rushed.

3 Stars

Filed Under: Romance Fiction Tagged With: Betty Neels, Clean Romance, Romance, Romance Novels

Three for a Wedding – Betty Neels English Romance

January 19, 2020 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Betty Neels had only a few plots – the Marriage of Convenience, the Other Woman, and Normal Courtship with Complications. Three for a Wedding fits the second, a straight-forward romance complicated by a gullible heroine, clueless hero and conniving Other Woman.

Sybil Brooks persuades her older sister, Phoebe, to take her place in an exchange scheme, where Phoebe works under a Dutch doctor to learn his cystic fibrosis techniques. Sybil is obnoxious, so it’s a good thing Betty wrote her a minor part, leaving Phoebe and her RDD (rich Dutch doctor) Lucius van Someren, to star.

Maureen, the governess for Peter, Lucius’ 10-year old adopted son, is The Other Woman, determined to marry Lucius and thoroughly nasty. Phoebe is just gullible enough to believe some of Maureen’s lies and tells herself she cannot say anything to Lucius because he might love Maureen.

Most of Betty Neels’ Other Women are unpleasant, greedy and selfish, but their main fault is wanting to marry the hero for his money and social position, not for love. Maureen is something different, truly an evil person. It’s incomprehensible that Phoebe would not say anything and believe that Lucius would rather not know some about some Maureen shenanigans.

I have a very hard time believing some of what Phoebe will keep quiet about. Even if Lucius in fact did love Maureen, he ought to know that:

  • Maureen tries to beat Paul’s new puppy to death.
  • Maureen threatens Paul, holding his puppy over his head, emotionally manipulates him

Lucius is oblivious to Maureen’s mean ways and ambitions. He’s supposed to be absent-minded but he’s a bit too clueless to be real, especially since he was astute enough to immediately realize Phoebe is not Sybil.

Phoebe and Lucius are both silly, but of course, that’s necessary for our plot to advance! Putting aside Maureen’s plots and evil lies we have a straightforward courtship. Lucius takes Phoebe out several times, kisses her like he means it, shows her his home, introduces her to his adopted son and family retainers. He makes the fatal Neels-land error, though, and tells Phoebe he intends to get married, but without telling her whom he intends for a wife. (Only Betty could get away with this. I don’t know anyone quite this dumb.)

Three for a Wedding is easy to read, with a well-done evil temptress, decent support characters in Phoebe’s fellow nurse and her fiance, and some heartfelt moments with the ill children. The obtuse Lucius and Phoebe are a bit over the top but still fun to read.

4 Stars

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Filed Under: Romance Fiction Tagged With: Betty Neels, Clean Romance, Romance, Romance Novels

The Right Kind of Girl – Betty Neels English Romance

January 17, 2020 by Kathy Leave a Comment

The Right Kind of Girl

The Right Kind of Girl is a classic Betty Neels English romance, relying on a marriage of convenience, a dastardly Other Woman, well-written minor characters, a kind and upstanding hero/love interest, and a sweet-tempered, kind, generous, uncomplaining heroine, Emma. I read this about a year ago and wrote a short review then, this review is longer and I’ll spend more time on why this is both a very good and a frustrating read.

Emma lives with her mom in a small English country town and works as a companion for Mrs. Smith-Darcy, a thoroughly nasty woman. Emma and her mom rely on mom’s small pension and Emma’s small wages; life is difficult but Emma has the gift of happiness. She isn’t exactly content with her unpleasant job but she loves her mom and loves living in the English moor town.

When her employer feels ill after overeating, Dr. Paul Wyatt, subbing for the local GP, makes a house call and meets Emma as she grovels on the carpet picking up the bills Mrs. S-D tossed around.  Paul (aka Dr. Wyatt, our hero) is intrigued by Emma’s calm, matter-of-fact approach to her employer. (Paul claims later that he fell in love with her then.)

Emma’s mother collapses from a perforated ulcer while she and Emma are out driving narrow back roads on the moor; luckily Paul is driving by and takes mom to the hospital, operates and saves her life. He gives Emma rides back and forth for a week while mom recovers. Nasty Mrs. S-D fires Emma, but that’s OK, Emma finds work with Doreen Hervey caring for her newborn, her home, cooking and Doreen herself. Doreen is cheerful and pleasant but completely incapable of looking after herself, not to mention her baby. Paul is good friends with the Herveys and stops by to say hello; of course he knows Emma will be there.

Paul brings Emma fish ‘n chips one night, drives her to and from the hospital, spends a few moments having tea or talking with her. But remember, they have probably spent no more than 12 hours together, not a lot of time. Emma has demonstrated her kindness, charitable nature, generosity of spirit, even temper, warmth and empathy. Paul has shown himself to be somewhat remote, not at all chatty, kind in an impersonal way in the car, then personal, friendly and kind when he brings Emma fish ‘n chips and washes the dishes.

Emma’s mom dies, leaving Emma alone. Paul comes to the rescue, proposing a marriage of convenience. As in all Neels’ marriages of convenience (MOCs), the two agree to be friends, companions, not lovers. Emma has no idea Paul loves her and she is numb after her mom’s death.   Paul and Emma marry after a couple minor contretemps, leaving Emma to realize she loves Paul only when walking up the aisle.

Sadly Emma runs afoul of Diana, a lovely woman who runs a nursery for abandoned kids where Emma volunteers. Diana claims to have Paul’s love and Emma has no hold on him. It isn’t clear whether Diana wants to marry Paul or just likes to make trouble. 

Emma figures Diana is exaggerating – after all Paul chose Emma, not Diana – but she’s modest and not confident that Paul has much feeling for her. Diana purposely endangers Emma by sending her to a tinker camp in the moor during a storm, then lies to Paul, claiming Emma wanted to be a glory hound. Of course Paul should have known better; the last thing Emma wants is the spotlight. But he’s known Diana for a couple of years and respects her.

The worst happens when Paul confronts Emma about the tinker camp: “Diana is worth a dozen of you.” Yes. He actually says this. Bloggers on The Uncrushable Jersey Dress call this the equivalent of the unforgivable curse in Harry Potter, and they are right.

How is Emma now supposed to believe that Paul cares about her? Diana tells Emma constantly that Paul doesn’t and never will love her, and now Paul has corroborated that. “Diana is worth a dozen of you.” Emma still is reluctant to believe Paul would have married her while in love with Diana, but then Paul says he’s going on a 4-month lecture tour. Alone. Now Emma has reason to believe that Paul wants her gone, that regardless how he feels about Diana, he certainly doesn’t love or want Emma.

Unforgivable or not, the “worth a dozen of you” isnt’ the worst part of the story. The part that astounds me is that Paul has the colossal nerve to tell Emma that “she doesn’t trust him”! Hello! Earth to Paul! Wake up, buddy. You just told your wife a few days before that she’s not worth the stuff on the bottom of your shoe, and now you are upset that she believes nasty Diana? I have a real problem with this part, especially since Emma thinks she needs to apologize! What about Paul needing to wake up and realize you don’t tell your wife that she’s worthless, and then expect her to trust that you aren’t having an affair?

Here’s where Betty Neels’ genius with minor characters plays its part. Maisie, an older woman, works in the nursery and sees right through Diana. Maisie warns Emma, and reassures her that Diana is sneaky and nasty. Finally Maisie positions herself to eavesdrop when Paul (finally!) confronts Diana, and steps in to explain to Paul exactly how deceitful Diana has been. Paul goes home to find Emma is planning something.

The rest of the novel is a delight. Paul and Emma realize each loves the other and Paul foils Emma’s attempt to slide out of his life and slip anonymously into the workforce. Plenty of kissing and I love yous ensue.

Let’s see what makes The Right Kind of Girl such a good example of Betty Neels, and why I enjoy it so much.

+++ The first third of the novel is Emma’s straightforward story. Poor, yes, spineless, no. Kind, generous, hard working, yes. We like Emma.

++ We don’t get to know Paul very well in the first part. Obviously he’s interested in Emma and yes, he too is kind and generous. We get hints that he’s falling in love.

+++ The middle part, after Emma’s mom dies and before she starts volunteering at the nursery (about a 5 week period) is charming. Emma isn’t too sure about this marriage idea, isn’t too sure Paul will be satisfied with someone like her, worries whether his family and friends will like her. Emma is reluctant to marry a rich man and a little fearful she might not be satisfactory in her social role, but that’s relatively minor worry.

++ Emma has enough common sense that she takes Diana with a big shaker of salt, but just enough modesty and self-awareness to also realize that there could be just a drop of truth in there.

——- (If I put in all the minus signs it needs I wouldn’t have room to write words.) Diana is a piece of work. Paul is mostly taken in by her, and he’s foolish enough to believe her idiotic accusation that Emma wanted to star in the Rescue of the Tinkers. That’s bad. The Unforgivable Curse (Diana is worth a dozen of you) is really bad. Paul at this point is clueless and digging his own hole with a pile driver.

+++ Neels wrote several great characters. Maisie is a delight. She’s shrewd, full of common sense, and not averse to plain speaking. Doreen Hervey, incompetent mom and homemaker, is a great character. She’s written as loving and lovable, just not too bright and not at all capable. Mrs S-D, she of the nasty temper is a stock character, the stuck up rich lady. Mr. Dobbs, who owns the garage that rents cars to Emma, appears mostly as a voice on the phone, someone willing to feed Emma’s cat. Emma’s mom has a small role, enough to show us how close she and Emma are and allow Emma to display her kindness and fortitude.

I hope you can see why The Right Kind of Girl is well worth reading. It’s classic Neels, completely clean, and warm and cozy. Reading it is like sitting by the fire, all wrapped up in a warm afghan with a cat on your lap. On the other hand, Paul’s two or three jarring comments and Diana’s non-stop undermining make it a bit difficult to enjoy completely. I’m sure Emma has forgiven Paul for his ghastly remark, but we readers have a harder time forgetting it.

Filed Under: Romance Fiction Tagged With: Betty Neels, Clean Romance, Romance, Romance Novels

Three Betty Neels Romances That Disappoint – The Fifth Day of Christmas, Saturday’s Child, Heaven Around the Corner

March 1, 2019 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I enjoy most Betty Neels’ romance novels; she builds in warmth and happiness and of course all the stories have happy endings.  Here are three that disappointed me, all with implausible romances and nasty men.

The Fifth Day of Christmas

Neels wrote The Fifth Day of Christmas in 1971, making it one of her earliest novels, and it shows.  The plot is implausible (as are most but we can slide right over that when the stories are good) but the part that disturbed me is when heroine Julia makes a nasty comment about hero Ivo’s supposed semi-fiance Marcia.  He grabs Julia and shakes her until her teeth rattle – and then Julia thinks she is at fault but doesn’t want to apologize!  Even back 50 years ago this was wrong.

2 Stars

Saturday’s Child

Neels usually provides us with likable characters.  The man may fight against loving the lady, but he is always polite and usually kind.  Not so with Saturday’s Child.  Here our hero, Professor Dominic van Wijkelen, doesn’t trust women and doesn’t want to believe Abigail can truly love him and doesn’t want to love her either.  The problem is that Dominic is mean, even cruel.

While Abigail is in Holland, Dominic hires her to nurse a friend, then another friend, then to work in the hospital, but never actually pays her.  When she finally says something to him, only after making her own way back to England and only after he asks her to come back for yet another round of nursing, Dominic arranges her to get her money.  All well and good, but we expect people to learn from mistakes.  Dominic re-engages Abigail and once again does not pay her.  And once again she doesn’t say anything despite being penniless.

Maybe he could forget once. But twice?  And she could be wary of asking for her wages once.  But twice?  To me this makes Dominic untrustworthy and unkind and even a little abusive.  And it makes Abigail a patsy.

The rest of the plot and story are fine.  The conflict is Dominic’s distrust and unwillingness to believe in Abigail; he overhears something, jumps to conclusions and once more shoves Abigail (still unpaid) out of his life and out of Holland.  She doesn’t have any money and goes to live with a friend of a friend and takes a poorly paying job in a store before Dominic once more shows up and wafts her away with rapturous kisses.

If I had been she I’d have demanded he pay me, then leave and inform him that he needed to get control of his distrust and get over himself, get off his high horse before he bothers to come see me yet again.  Even in 1973 I think most self-reliant ladies would have been a little less trusting.

2 Stars

Heaven Around the Corner

Heaven Around the Corner has two romances, both unsatisfying.  Our primary romance is Louisa Evans, newly qualified nurse, falling in love with the unpleasant Simon Savage.  Simon is well-named.  The second involves Louisa’s patient, Simon’s sister, the alcoholic Claudia Savage and Lars, a banker.

Both romances lack credibility.  Claudia and Lars barely know each other and Lars surely should be wary of hitching his life to an alcoholic wife.  Louisa and Simon also don’t spend much time together and Simon spends most of it being obnoxious and Louisa is self-righteous.  Ugh.

Neels describes Norway with loving detail and as usual for her novels makes one want to visit and enjoy the breathtaking scenery and friendly people.

This is one of the few Betty Neels novels I had a hard time finishing; it is boring with unlikable characters and unsatisfying plot and story.

2 Stars  (It would be 1 star without the excellent setting.)

Filed Under: Romance Fiction Tagged With: Book Review, Not So Good, Romance Novels

The Final Touch – A Romance by Betty Neels – Marriage of Convenience

February 14, 2019 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Betty Neels wrote 134 romance novels, all perfectly clean, most featuring English nurses and rich Dutch doctors.  The Final Touch fits Neels’ classic mold:  Dutch resident doctor Cor entices Charity with sweet nothings when he is in England on a course, convincing her that he loves her so that she follows him to Holland where she takes a hospital  job and eventually realizes Cor is a nasty flirt, and has never been serious about her.  Rich Dutch consulting physician Tyco finds Charity crying in the hall and takes her out to supper.   He eventually proposes a marriage of convenience because his two young daughters need a mother.

I enjoyed The Final Touch because Charity is a fairly strong character, marrying Tyco because she likes him and his daughters, not quite realizing that she is beginning to love him.  Tyco also is more developed than some of Neels’ rich Dutch doctors, feeling vulnerable because he is older than Charity and fears she may still be attached to Cor.

Much as with any romance we readers can’t be too fussy about the plot.  Sometimes the conflicts in Neels’ stories are silly; lying old girl friends (or wanna-be girl friends), or foolish misunderstandings and often he or she jumps to conclusions and makes everyone miserable.

The Final Touch has two conflicts.  Neither Tyco nor Charity realizes they are falling in love and thus step ever so carefully around each other, worrying about the other’s feelings.  Also, Charity’s very beautiful model step sister decides to make a play for Tyco and Charity believes her lies.

Read The Final Touch – indeed, any of Betty Neels’ novels – for pleasure, to see two people fall in love and wade through a few challenges to have a happy life together.

Filed Under: Romance Fiction Tagged With: 4 Stars Pretty Good, Book Review, Romance Novels

Three Betty Neels Romances – The End of the Rainbow, The Bachelor’s Wedding, The Little Dragon

January 4, 2019 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Betty Neels wrote gentle, clean romances from 1970 to about 2000, many featuring English ladies, often nurses, and Dutch or English rich men, often doctors.  These three novels are good examples of her writing.

The End of the Rainbow

Olympia is a trained nurse who works for her aunt at below-minimum wage in her very profitable London nursing home.  When Olympia was young her nasty aunt convince Olympia to promise that she would work for her aunt forever, unless she married, and Olympia feels bound by this promise.  Olympia encounters Dutch doctor Waldo van der Graaf whose wife is dead, leaving him with a young daughter.

Waldo proposes marriage under the guise of wanting a mother for his daughter.  Elizabeth, a long-time friend of Waldo’s secretly sabotages Olympia, finally convincing his little girl to run away while blaming it on Olympia.  Of course everything ends up happy.

Neels created a sympathetic character in Olympia and built her well.  Often Neels creates female characters who effortlessly adapt to a completely different lifestyle – foreign country, marriage, being rich and living in a home with servants and plenty of money for clothes and flowers – and Olympia actually has to learn how to act in this new environment.  Waldo and the other characters are less well-crafted, acting more as a cipher and respondent.  The End of the Rainbow is one of Neels’ enjoyable stories.

4 Stars

The Bachelor’s Wedding

I liked The Bachelor’s Wedding the best of the three novels reviewed here, in part because our heroine is not a nurse but a an emergency home helper, and neither of the two protagonists is secretly in love with the other.

Araminta lives with her “delicate” (aka lazy and selfish) sister and feckless father who dotes on her sister and views Araminta as unpaid help.  Professor Jason Lister hires Araminta to care for his niece and nephew when his sister must leave the country with no notice for an emergency.  First Araminta cares for them in Jason’s London home, then she goes with the two teens to their country home and stays a couple of weeks.

She doesn’t see much of Jason but finds him intriguing and kind, but intimidating.  When she returns home her sister hasn’t cleaned or done anything except spend all the housekeeping money on herself and her father expects her to user her earnings to pay the bills they both ran up.

(On a side note I’m appalled at the times Araminta mentions having to make other people’s beds.  Why doesn’t everyone make their own?)

Jason hasn’t fallen in love with her, nor she with him, but they like each other and he decides it’s time to marry and get a buffer against all the demanding young ladies he knows.  She likes him well enough and accepts, which causes her father to call her selfish and her sister to not attend her wedding but rather to wish her ill.

Of course everything ends up happy in the end.

4 Stars (Judging only Neels work I’d give this 5 stars)

The Little Dragon

I couldn’t finish this as the entire premise is nauseating.  Constantia worked as a private nurse for many rich people who were nasty and selfish and concluded all rich people were icky.  Dutch doctor Jeroen van der Giessen falls for her and constructs an elaborate charade of being poor and gets her to marry him in order to care for two children.  Constantia is supposedly so gullible and stupid that she believes this and assumes that Jeroen must be living in a rich uncle’s lovely home.

1 Star

Filed Under: Romance Fiction Tagged With: Book Review, Romance Novels

Five Betty Neels Romances – Making Sure of Sarah, Waiting for Deborah, A Suitable Match, Right Kind of Girl, All Else Confusion

November 25, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Betty Neels was unusual Harlequin romance author.  None of her books has any smut, profanity, blasphemy, vulgarity or even innuendo; all of her novels feature youngish ladies who are kind, warm hearted, sensible, resourceful, self-reliant and who range from plain to gorgeous.

All the novels have a Cinderella feel to them although all of the heroines are capable and willing to go it alone – even against hardships, uncaring family, bad luck, and even against their own heart.  I enjoy them and am glad that Hoopla digital now offers most of her 134 published novels.

Making Sure of Sarah

Making Sure of Sarah, published in 1998, has a lovely digital cover showing a house set on a hillside in gently rolling country marked with the colors of fall.  Most of the action takes place in London or in the Dutch city of Arnhem.

Sarah lives in London with her ineffectual mother and nasty stepfather and the three get into an accident when her stepfather drives their car into a ditch in the Dutch countryside.  She meets Litrik ter Breukel when he operates on her stepfather’s badly broken leg.  Litrik falls in love with Sarah, gives her a place to stay until her stepfather is able to travel, then pulls strings to help her get a job when they return to England and her parents vacation for several months.

The main conflicts are emotional:  Sarah falls for Litrik too and is reluctant to marry him when she doesn’t think he loves her; he thinks she is involved with a young English doctor and Sarah isn’t sure how to tell him that she is not.  There are no ex-girlfriends.

Story ends with Sarah marrying Litrik and moving to Holland.

Waiting for Deborah

Waiting for Deborah starts with redhead Deborah needing a job.  She took care of her stepfather until he died, now her stepbrother and stepsister tell her they inherited everything, she gets nothing, but she can stay rent-free (and income free) in their father’s house until they sell it.

Deborah says phooey to this and gets a job caring for an older lady recovering from a stroke and where she meets Sir James, consulting doctor.  After the lady’s niece fires Deborah, she gets temporary work in a hotel – about 14 hours a day – until Sir James takes her away to care for a friend’s elderly uncle for a few weeks, followed by a week at Sir James’ old nurse, followed by a stint as a mother’s help.

Eventually Deborah moves to London to learn typing and shorthand, fails at both, her landlady dies and again Sir James shows up, this time to take her back to his nurse’s home and ask her to marry him.

Neels wrote lovely characters in Waiting for Deborah, especially Uncle Oscar, the crochety elderly uncle with the tastes of a lively kid.  He spots the budding romance between Deborah and Sir James before James completely realizes it himself, and he comments just enough to get the ball rolling.

The conflict here is whether Deborah and Sir James will realize they love each other and whether Deborah can make a go of supporting herself.  No ex-girlfriends make trouble, the selfish step siblings make little inroads and all action takes place in England.

A Suitable Match

A Suitable Match is one of Neels’ more complicated novels, where the hero and heroine marry before one of them realizes they love each other.  Eustacia takes a job as bottle washer and errand-runner at the local hospital’s pathology lab to help her and her grandfather survive in London.  Eustacia runs into Sir Colin who is caring for his two young nephews and going slightly crazy with the responsibility.  Sir Colin offers Eustacia a job caring for his nephews, and both she and her grandfather can live in his country home.

Sir Colin becomes the boys’ guardian when their parents die in a plane crash and he asks Eustacia to marry him to strengthen his guardianship against the claims of his brother’s unpleasant in laws.  Of course they have the usual misunderstandings as both love the other without realizing the other loves them.

The main conflicts are misunderstandings as to true feelings.  One scene in the novel disturbs me.  The younger boy acts up and his grandmother punishes him, at which the older boy smacks her.  Eustacia is angry at the grandmother and does not agree that the boy should be punished for hitting her.  This is wrong.  Obviously the grandmother doesn’t remember how to care for youngsters but no child should strike his grandparent.

The Right Kind of Girl

Emma lives at home in a small country town with her mother and works as a companion where she meets Dr. Paul Wyatt.  Her mother has a stroke and Dr. Wyatt takes her to the hospital and cares for her.  Emma has to leave her job to care for her mom, who dies after a few weeks.  Paul falls in love with her while caring for her mother and asks her to marry him.   They marry after a couple minor contretemps.

Sadly Emma runs afoul of Diana, who either wants to marry Paul or just likes to make trouble.  A few scenes in the book are a bit hard to take; for example Paul believes Diana’s lies about Emma helping some tinkers without even trying to ask Emma about the situation.  He also tells her that Diana is worth a dozen of her.   Needless to say events work themselves out and both end up happy.

All Else Confusion

Here is another Neels novels where the two marry without realizing they both love each other.  In my mind this is by far the weakest of the five described here because there is no reason for Jake to rush Annis into marriage.  There is no crisis, no poverty trap, no lack of family and no real good reason for such a fast wedding.

Here the conflict is mostly one of misunderstanding, both of oneself and one’s spouse.

Overall

I enjoy clean stories with happy endings, and I’ve no problem with a touch of Cinderella – provided that the girl doesn’t just sit in the ashes and whine but actively seeks to better her life on her own.  All of Neels’ heroines try to handle life’s ups and downs as best they can.  Deborah for instance takes several menial jobs to support herself; Sarah is reluctant to marry a man who doesn’t love here and abhors pity.

On the other hand a couple of the heroes tread close to being mean, and the hero is actually quite nasty in The Right Kind of Girl.  Some of the girls allow their men to push them around just a little while others accept guidance but don’t accept manipulation or bossiness.

I recommend these if you want an easy to read novel, perfect for a cold evening by the fire.  I didn’t care for All Else Confusion but the others are lovely light romance reads.

Filed Under: Romance Fiction Tagged With: Not Fantasy or Science Fiction, Romance Novels

The Steam Pump Jump – Chronicles of St. Mary’s by Jodi Taylor Short Featuring Markham and Romance

August 1, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Last we visited St. Mary’s, grieving Dr. Peterson had his head and heart brutally ripped by by treachery.  Miss Dottle, who despite her crush on Tim Peterson, proved herself red-handed in league with Clive Ronan, responsible for spying on Max, that led Helen’s murder and Max and Matthew’s abductions.  Poor Tim.  He is heartbroken, barely functioning on autopilot.

Max has a wonderful idea to give him someone new, possibly leading to romance, possibly only to friendship.  Max recruits Markham to somehow shove Peterson and Miss Lingoss together while on their next jump, back to 1600s and the first steam pump in a castle, before Cromwell’s revolution.  What could possibly go wrong?

Of course Miss Sykes and Miss North come too – and get into a fierce argument in public and in the past – and Markham needs to sort them out, give Peterson and Lingoss time to talk, and yes, eat the entire picnic meant for six.

Once more we have the incredibly fun, zany adventures of the St. Mary’s gang, this time with Markham the central character and narrator.  Markham likes to pretend he’s stoic, unaffected by much, but we see the truth.  He cares deeply about Max, Tim, Leon (and Hunter), and is glad to take on Max’s subversive assignment.

Jodi Taylor creates such characters, alive, vivid, fascinating, full and completely human.  Add in a fun plot, good dialogue and the usual historical nuggets (that cause me to visit Wikipedia more than a few times) and we have another winner in this St. Mary’s short story.

You should not try to read The Steam Pump Jump without being somewhat familiar with the St. Mary’s crew and events so far.  At a minimum it would help to have read And the Rest Is History and  An Argumentation of Historians, Books 8 and 9 in the series.  Both books are excellent although more serious and a bit darker than the rest of the series.  The Steam Pump Jump brings us readers back to lighthearted fun and is a worthy addition to the series and the lore of St. Mary’s.

5 Stars

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Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: 5 Stars, Book Review, Fantasy, Romance Novels

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