5/3/17
I'm a huge fan of Betty Neels, as anyone who follows my reviews can tell. I discovered her books in my preteen years and continued reading them and collecting them into young adulthood. Then I didn't reread them for at least 20 years - I had moved on to other genres - but I didn't love them less and I would never have parted with them.
Then I rediscovered them in my overcrowded library, behind a row of newer books, and decided to reread them. That is when I found The Uncrushable Jersey Dress blog and Facebook group, and I learned that, contrary to what I previously thought, I am not the only fan of TGB on the planet!
All that was a prelude to this. Even a fan as dedicated as I will admit that TGB wrote a number of books that are routine and only vaguely memorable, while others shine like the jewels they are. Sometimes it takes a rereading to mine all the goodies; sometimes the goodness needs to simmer after reading it.
This book is one of the latter. On a cursory read, it's a pretty standard Neels MOC story, but there are enough unique features that, for me anyway, sets it apart from the run-of-the-mill.
My only criticism is that I wish the second half - post-marriage/pre-Declaration of Love - were as delightful as the first half. And that is why this one does not quite rate 5 stars for me.
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Arabella Lorimer is a young woman from a good background but she was left penniless when her parents died suddenly. She is unable to find work with board where she can keep her cat, Percy. She already had to take her horse and donkey to an animal sanctuary.
She answers an advertisement for caretaker/cleaner of a doctor's office which includes a basement room - no objection to Percy. She quickly makes the basement her home and even acquires a puppy, rescuing him from the street.
But the younger of the doctors, Titus Tavener, makes her uncomfortable and she tries to avoid him. He, however, is bothered by her working such an unsuitable job and keeps popping into her life. So, he proposes a MOC.
From this point, we follow the Betty Joanna rule - fortunately, I never get tired of shopping, even vicariously. Arabella gets her wires crossed about a female Dutch doctor, thinking Titus is in love with her (to be fair, Dr Tulsma lies through her teeth to Arabella).
Titus and Arabella celebrate Christmas at the manor house with aunts and uncles and cousins., all of which are described beautifully.
Arabella becomes more and more unhappy about Geraldine Tulsma and after Christmas, on an evening when Titus is expected to arrive, Arabella goes for a walk and falls into a gully; the rain soon turns to sleet and she's in quite a pickle. Of course, Titus finds her and lifts her out. For his part, he can wait no longer; as soon as Arabella is warm and dry, he tells her he loves her and doesn't care a jot for Geraldine.
There is a brief epilogue in the form of a letter from Titus to Arabella 18 months later; Arabella reads it to Pledge #1, a very small son.
Really lovely. 4.25 stars.