After loving the first in this series, then feeling rather meh about the second, I wasn't quite sure what to expect from the third. But the blurb - high seas! Pirate-y adventure! Bridgerton heroine! - I was pretty excited to give it a try. I'm so glad I did.
JQ is back in full Bridgerton glory. Her trademark witty banter and complex characters seem fresh - a new set of characters within the same family we've all loved for years. I loved how Poppy and Andrew actually communicated; the turn in romance novels from feisty heroine who gets a blistering setdown from an alpha hero to feisty heroine who can get the alpha hero to actually treat her like the functioning adult she is, is something I'm loving. JQ is nailing this new time period, too. She's not bogging me down in details of the 1700s; instead, she's giving me enough to make me more interested in it. She gives the pertinent details - who's on the throne, what political parties are at play, and the dress/expected behaviors of the time - but I never felt I had to sit through a history lesson (which happens in many of these novels). These details were artfully sprinkled in, never overwhelming or distracting from the story itself.
Poppy was fantastic. She's a smart woman - smart enough to know when she's being outsmarted. She knows when to keep her mouth shut, showing a degree of maturity that many Regency heroines lack. She's quick-witted, knows when to do what she's told, and doesn't make stupid decisions. I adored that.
Andrew is a good, honorable man. He gains respect through hard work and treating people right; the subject of racism is brought up, handled, and accepted (not the racism itself, but there's a point when Poppy realizes that she's been insulated from it and wants to change, yet doesn't know how yet). Andrew accepts all people based on who they are, not what they look like or what their rank is, and his general good guy vibes shine through, despite the situation Poppy is in (kidnapped by two of Andrew's men).
The romance was fun, the adventure was well-played, and the Bridgerton name carries on as one of the best literary families to read. But I think that what I loved most about this book was that I can really see the changing tide of the romance novel inside of this historical romance's pages. In the beginning of romance novels, it was 100% female submission (he "bodice rippers," if you will). Then it became strong women, but stronger men (the woman who had to learn to accept that she did not always know best because, actually, the "alpha" hero did). But now, there's a tide towards true feminism - equality. The heroine and the hero are two imperfect sides of the same coin. They complement each other, and are strong where the other is weak. The hero doesn't always know best, but neither does the heroine. They communicate openly and as honestly as the storyline provides, and while the attraction drives the lust, the mutual respect is what drives the romance - and it's THAT which makes me believe in this couple's happily-ever-after.
Well done, JQ. You've once again given this reader a modern story in a historical setting with wonderful, relatable, lovable characters. Five stars.
**I received an eARC from the publisher in exchange for an honest and unbiased review.**