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Wideacre #2

The Favored Child

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The Wideacre estate is bankrupt. The villagers are living in poverty and Wideacre Hall is a smoke-blackened ruin. But, in the Dower House, two children are being raised in protected innocence.

Equal claimants to the estate, rivals for the love of the village, they are tied by a secret childhood betrothal but forbidden to marry. Only one can be the favored child. Only one can inherit the magical understanding between the land and the Lacey family that can make the Sussex village grow green again. Only one can be Beatrice Lacey's true heir.

Sensual, gripping, sometimes mystical, The Favored Child sweeps the reader irresistibly into the eighteenth century, a revolutionary period in English history. This rich and dramatic novel continues the saga of the Lacey family started in Philippa Gregory's bestselling and enduringly popular Wideacre.

627 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1989

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About the author

Philippa Gregory

133 books36.6k followers
DR PHILIPPA GREGORY studied history at the University of Sussex and was awarded a PhD by the University of Edinburgh where she is a Regent and was made Alumna of the Year in 2009. She holds an honorary degree from Teesside University, and is a fellow of the Universities of Sussex and Cardiff. Philippa is a member of the Society of Authors and in 2016, was presented with the Outstanding Contribution to Historical Fiction Award by the Historical Writers’ Association. In 2018, she was awarded an Honorary Platinum Award by Neilsen for achieving significant lifetime sales across her entire book output. In 2021, she was awarded a CBE for services to literature and to her charity Gardens for the Gambia. and was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

She welcomes visitors to her site www.PhilippaGregory.com.

Philippa's Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/PhilippaGregoryOfficial

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 710 reviews
Profile Image for Reading Corner.
89 reviews125 followers
February 5, 2016
So I haven't actually read the first book, Wideacre but it never affected my understanding or enjoyment of this book, although I'll definitely be seeking out the first book after this one. This is a fantastic historical novel which perfectly captures the massive unjust in society at the time between social classes and genders. This theme echoes throughout the whole novel and at times makes you clench your fists at the unfairness in it. I've never read a book that has given me such strong emotions like this one.Every unfair action, or outcome gave me a rush of hatred and every good outcome, gave me a sense of pleasure or content at the long deserved justice. And this happens frequently, especially an overwhelming feeling of annoyance as Philippa Gregory seems to love torturing her characters.

The main character, Julia, is usually a pushover which can become extremely frustrating sometimes but you never hate her as you can clearly comprehend why and I even found myself rooting for her a lot.Richard, well Richard is just a massive twat who for most of it I had a massive desire for someone to just smash his head off a wall, I really hated him, so Philippa Gregory did a great job there.

For me, there was some massive twists which I only kinda saw but I think if you read the first book you would have known.Nevertheless, I enjoyed the sudden reveal and how the plot developed into something much more. I had no idea where the story was going but I thoroughly enjoyed how things ended up.

For me, the start was slow but all the characters were developed brilliantly along with the plot. This was a wonderful historical novel but definitely not for the faint-hearted because of some shocking themes.
Profile Image for Jan.
1,020 reviews2 followers
January 22, 2008
Wow, what is this...a trilogy about incest? At least one of the characters was a reluctant participant for this second book in the trilogy. This family has more bad karma than Oedipus. All the aristocratic decadence makes you want to cheer for the French Revolution and the guillotine. Whopping story, though, in a pervy kind of way.
Profile Image for Brooke.
88 reviews1 follower
August 30, 2008
It's bad.
It's painful to read.
I think Gregory enjoys torturing her characters a little TOO much.
I read pretty well until about page 450 or so, but I just couldn't take it anymore. I skimmed the rest. I HAD to see what happened but I didn't want to actually READ it.
Profile Image for Camille.
28 reviews5 followers
August 9, 2016
Well - moving straight from Wildacre to this book, I was less than surprised to find similar themes. Unfortunately, where I somehow couldn't keep myself from liking Beatrice (I know - horrible, right?), I just couldn't seem to get on Julia's side. Right off the bat I was annoyed at her for not standing up for herself to Richard - a theme which continued throughout the entire book. I even put the book down in disgust and didn't come back to it for an entire evening (gasp!) SO frustrated. The only time I really liked her was the few months she spent in the city and met James. While I'm complaining I might as well mention that I wish the foreshadowing of her dream with the baby wouldn't have come up so early. It's not THAT hard to figure out what it's alluding to and basically gives up the entire ending! Oh well. I still read it in a relatively short time - which means I didn't entirely dislike the book. I was just really really really frustrated the whole time.
Profile Image for Emma.
2,677 reviews1,085 followers
January 26, 2019
Richard was so horrible it ruined my enjoyment of the book. So 4 stars but in terms of entertainment, only 2. Such a sad story.
Profile Image for Paula.
9 reviews1 follower
December 24, 2007
The Favored Child. It was the 2nd book in a trilogy. I have since read the 1st book- Widacre and the 3rd- Meridon. Ok...so the 1st and 2nd books were very annoying because you just HATE everyone in it. They basically make the same mistakes over and over proving that they are all idiots....who love incest apparently...anyway, the 3rd book was a little better b/c it was different than the first two and actually came to a resolution that wasn't totally idiotic as previous generations....plus no incest, thank goodness. Maybe it was just that the trilogy was ending that made it better. I don't think that I would recommend these books to anyone. They are stressful to read. Unless you enjoy yelling at the books you read, skip these 3.
Profile Image for Annette Summerfield.
701 reviews16 followers
May 17, 2022
What a horrible book that I couldn't put down.
A little past the middle of the book I was getting frustrated
and did start to skim through it to see what was going to happen.
It was just too difficult to read what Richard was doing.
I wanted to reach into the book and strangle him. He needed to be
dumped into a deep, dark dungeon and suffer for the rest of his life.
Death was too good for him.
As for Julia...Ralph tried to make her see the light.
When she didn't tell John and her mom what Richard had done to her, I could
have screamed.
When she never realized how sick Richard was I wanted to sit her down
and have a good talking to her.
This is a tragic love story. Why or why could not Philippa Gregory give
Julia a good ending and have her and James reunited.
I hate to read the 3rd book, but I will.
This isn't my typical read but I've seemed to got involved in it anyways.
It's a horrible book with a lot of incest and cruelty, no happy ever after but
it sure puts a reader through a roller coaster of feelings and kept me reading.
I think I kept reading hoping Julia would find some happiness....Philippa Gregory
wasn't on the same thought line as me though.
Profile Image for Celia Lisset Alvarez.
Author 12 books51 followers
January 31, 2021
Hee-hee. Loved it. It's really well-written, although maybe not as well as Wideacre, the first in the trilogy (Meridon is next). The story of the Lacey squires of Wideacre continues, and it's just as dark and compelling as it ever was.
This one looks at what became of the incestuous children of Wideacre, and the narrator is Julia, whom we know to be Beatrice and Harry's daughter although she has never been told. She is an intriguing if frustrating main character. I like it that Gregory did not simply rewrite Beatrice of Wideacre. In fact, Celia-bred Julia is very much Beatrice's antitype, mousy and weak, although not distastefully so. Her brother-cousin is interesting, too, although not exactly well-rounded. Wideacre's Beatrice was mad, but, since she was the main character, you followed her along, albeit wincingly. Since Richard is not the protagonist, however, there's a certain remoteness to him that doesn't work all the way for me. In the end he's just nuts, which is not very interesting. I would maybe have liked the story told from his point of view, but Gregory is once again pushing the feminist angle by giving voice to the woman, which is great, I suppose, politically, but maybe not the best choice creatively. I was pretty disappointed with the other returning characters, Celia, John, and Ralph. They hardly seem to matter, especially John, who acts on the fringes of the plot, at best.
The plot itself is adequately horrifying although much more predictable than Wideacre, especially given Julia's premonitions, which she somehow doesn't understand although anyone (even someone who hasn't read Wideacre) can see what they're about. Nevertheless, I liked the ending.
Despite these flaws, it's still Gregory at her best, first-person female narrator, English countryside. No one can write more compellingly than her in this genre. You can bet I'm picking up Meridon, the third part. I do think both novels so far would stand alone, however, although of course you add more if you've read both. Given the problem with predictability, I wonder if I'd have liked The Favored Child better had I read it before Wideacre. Yep. Probably. Do that. But read it; so fun.
Profile Image for Barbara.
264 reviews36 followers
September 27, 2008
This is book 2 in a 3 part trilogy. Wideacre was the original book which started with Beatrice and her brother Harry. The Favored Child picks up with Beatrice's children Julia and Richard. I have read a lot of books but I've never read a book that I hated a character so much. Everytime Richard's name was even mentioned I wanted to slap him.

No spoilers if you have read book 1.

In Book 1, Beatrice makes sure that both her children are joint heirs for Acre. The children don't know it, but they are not really cousins as they thought they were but actually brother and sister as Beatrice and her brother Harry have a sexual relationship that produces both children. Harry does not know this. Beatrice's sister in law raises the children while John (Beatrice's husband) is off in India trying to become wealthy again and pay off the debt of Acre.

As the children grow, Julia has the same love of the land as Beatrice. She's just not evil like her. Richard on the other hand is an evil character who is only out for money has no regard for people or their feelings. I must say, he is the most evil character in a book that I have ever read. Couldn't stand him from the moment his name was mentioned in the book. Richard is always plotting and Julia and Acre are usually at the receiving end of his plans.

A good read but be prepared for some troubling spots in the book. If you liked book 1, you'll enjoy book 2.
1 review
January 5, 2010
Philippa Gregory is an incredible author, she knows how to make a 'page-turner' and I have enjoyed many of her books. This book has been my least favorite of all the books I have read of hers, because, the protagonist-Julia Lacey- is such a complete wuss that she allows her entire world to crumble and become ruined until finally at the very last moment does she stand up for herself. This really is a case of too little too late. She has been protecting her cousin/brother Richard for her whole life, she never tells her mother the truth and thus there is a huge void and lack of true family intimacy in the house. Richard rules Julia completely their entire life. As Julia is 'sweet' and generous with her naive love, she never tells on her brother when he behaves terribly, abuses her physically. She could have stopped things earlier on...when he starts hurting her physically or manipulating her family or verbally assaulting her. He keeps testing his limits with her, and she like a naive idiot keeps falling for his 'charm.' He doesn't seem very charming to me. Well in a surprise to no one, as he has tested how far she will let him push it his whole life and learns that she will protect him no matter the cost to herself or others, he rapes her violently, breaking her wrist. Then to hide his perversion (oh yea, they are brother and sister), he kills her best friend...and the adults acting as their parents. Julia has the perfect opportunity so many times to tell her loving acting mother and father the truth about Richard...but she doesn't. She gets pregnant and is in denial that this is the result of her rape. The last 200 pages of the book are filled with vivid descriptions of her 'loneliness' with her swooning and sighing to herself all the while that she is so lonely. Yeah, it must be really lonely when you allow yourself to be bullied into marrying the most evil person you know and then he kills all your loved ones...and completely isolates you from the one man who actually loves you. Oh yeah, she had even more opportunity before the rape to tell her parents how her brother/cousin was sabotaging her engagement to a wonderful man. She even goes farther and participates and elaborates in protecting her brother/cousin through lies when she ruins the reputation of the man she loves-James. I don't feel sorry for her because she has multiple opportunities to stop this terrible progression, but each time she chooses not to and then acts all pitiful when she receives the consequence of her actions. Overall, a very frustrating read... if she was weak for most of the book but then found her spine and made things right, that would be okay and welcome. But by the time she finds her backbone, Richard has ruined her life irreversibly...and she just sits idly by and lets him do it. This is a perfect quote, in my mind she is just as guilty as he is. The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing She is so weak and spineless that she would rather live in denial and be pathetically upset when something bad happens than face the truth. She has a gift, a true sight of the future and she refuses to use it to save her loved ones from impending and absolute ruin or death. She is pathetic, lame and weak...she deserves what she gets because she never stands up for herself or has any iota of self-preservation...but at the same time, she doesn't truly care about her 'loved ones' because she lies to them all the time and allows them to be destroyed by Richard. While saying this, please do not think I believe Julia deserved to be raped...she did not. However, she had the skills to prevent the situation escalating and she choose not to repeatedly. In some ways, I think Julia is a less like-able heroine than Beatrice. Beatrice was evil and she was doing evil things to Acre. While Beatrice was evil, there was no one who had the potential to stop her. Harry was a pathetic excuse for a human-being (in the first book). Here, Julia has all the potential to do great things for Wideacre and Acre...but she chooses blindness and denial... she chooses death for her loved ones and people because she is too weak and afraid to face the truth about Richard.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Sarah Mac.
1,222 reviews
July 6, 2019
A synopsis is useless for this particular book. Everything that takes place is somehow born of the twisted happenings in Wideacre, whether directly or indirectly...so there's little point in attempting a summary.

Beatrice Lacey was an unreliable narrator of the finest sort -- a complete psycho in some ways, but startlingly insightful in others. In contrast to Beatrice, Julia Lacey is intended as a positive figure. She doesn't conspire to murder & destroy for personal reasons, nor does she willingly enter into an incestuous relationship with her sibling. But peripheral characters from Book 1 have been burned by Beatrice & her dominating awfulness, & they ruthlessly stomp the smallest signs of willfull behavior (i.e., "Beatrice's witchery") within Julia's veins. The result? An unrepentant doormat of a heroine -- a woman who has no concept of what an abusive relationship is, a woman with absurd expectations of love, a woman who is nowhere nearly strong enough to renew Acre & still defeat her brother Richard. One or the other...maybe. But not both. The most irksome aspect of TFC is Julia's indoctrination into & acceptance of the abusive relationship with Richard -- she believes that indoctrination is a woman's duty, & she accepts Richard's domination as the natural course of their roles, even when his touch starts to repel her & she learns the full extent of his evil. Her voice is a peek into Battered Woman Syndrome, & it's extremely uncomfortable (as it's meant to be).

...But if Julia makes your teeth grind, that's nothing compared to Richard.

If anyone in literary dickhead history deserves to have his face beaten to a pulp, that guy is Richard. He's an unbelievably disgusting individual. Whereas Beatrice had the self-awareness to recognize limits to her perversion -- her respectful treatment of animals, for example, as compared to whipping her brother -- Richard has none of that awareness. Instead we have a manipulative, abusive, paranoid psychopath who thinks rape, murder, & destruction are his by right of age, sex, & social position. His ultimate demise is a given -- survival of the fittest among the animal kingdom that is Wideacre -- but I can't say it was nearly gruesome enough.

Taken as a whole, TFC is a good read. The descriptions are lovely & the story comes through with an elegant, vivid narration. Julia's ultimate growth into a mature woman is worth the journey -- but be warned of a frustrating ride. If nothing else, it's a necessary step in the Lacey saga -- that dreaded middle installment of a trilogy, the phase where everything is broken in order to be rebuilt, like The Two Towers or The Empire Strikes Back.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Katie.dorny.
1,159 reviews645 followers
February 20, 2022
Ngl THAT ending had me on edge. And somehow this was more fucked up than the first book which I didn’t even think was possible???
Profile Image for Mahayana Dugast.
Author 5 books274 followers
April 26, 2022
After the first book I didn't think that I would want to read any more, it was very good, but the main character was so vicious that it almost gave me nightmares!!

Anyway I found this book free on audible so being a few months later, I took my courage with both hands (lol) and downloaded it to listen. It was actually very good, and although still dramatically horrific in parts, not quite as bad as my mind expected with every insinuation.

This is an 18th century saga about the Lacey family, living on Wideacre, a country estate surrounded by woods and a village that were once bountiful havens, where the wealthy took care of their people, or a least until the obsessive, narcissistic, abusive, perverse and incestuous Beatrice Lacey grew up to literally ruin everything and everyone on the land.

Now her children, Julia & Richard (who are raised to believe they are cousins - a strange and difficult thing to accept, given Celia and John McAndrews' knowledge and their previous grievances ... I won't spoil it for you if you read book I) are intent on setting things right in Wideacre, and for a time, with the help of Ralph, the mysterious legless gypsy, (a fantastical character who was once in love with Beatrice) things look as though there might be hope for the village.

But that doesn't last long, because of course, history is set to repeat itself.
I'm not sure if I'll be up to reading the 3rd one, I'll leave it a few months anyway :-)

A well written book, highlighting the horror of the disparity between social classes, and last but not least, between men and women, most of which still very much goes on today in far too many places.

Anyway, rant over!
Profile Image for Chris.
878 reviews187 followers
June 25, 2023
3.5 stars. It has many years since I read Wideacre because I was so disgusted & mortified by the actions and complete lack of moraity of the main character. I wasn't sure I wanted to continue, but I came across this copy at a thrift store and decided to grab it. I liked it better than the first (and you don't have to have read the first to understand this novel) even though it has it's own amoral, evil character in it. And there is some horrible animal abuse which usually turns me off. Fortunately, just short mentions for the most part & I shed a tear & moved on.
So, I waffled on my liking of the main character (Julia). When I thought she should grow a spine I had to keep reminding myself of what it was like for girls/women during the historical period of the late 18th century. The story is seen through Julia's eyes and follows her life growing up as impoverished gentry living on the bankrupt Lacey estate with her mother and cousin Richard through her teenage/YA years. Things begin to turn around when her Uncle John returns to England, wealthy & wanting to reinvest in the estate but with an eye to working and sharing the profits of the land with the local poor people of the town of Acre. John brings in a beloved former resident of Acre, Ralph Megson, to be the manager of the project and uses him to convince the people to work together. Richard seems to agree but he has always harbored the desire to be the sole Squire of Wideacre and bides his time as he manipulates others. As Julia finds her calling on the land and with the people, Richard's inferiority complex (my judgement) leads him down a darker path.
Profile Image for Mimi Wolske.
293 reviews32 followers
February 16, 2014
Fascinating, gripping, sexual, sensuous, grim, incestuous, a little mysterious, horrifying, unrelenting despair (and by comparison, I think Thomas Hardy's Tess of the d'Urbeyvilles got off light)—if these adjectives don't discourage you away from this love-it-or-hate-it book, you're in for a real ride.

Philippa Gregory's "The Favored Child" was written so expertly it did not depend too heavily on "Wideacre" (the first book of her trilogy) ... I know this because I did not read the first book, but I don't recommend doing the same—back story is so very important.

So, here's the setup from book two.

Beatrice MacAndrew and Harry Lacey are brother and sister from the chalky village in Sussex; Beatrice married Dr. John MacAndrew and Harry married Celia Havering. The villagers came after Beatrice(who went crazy and ruined the viallage), but it's The Culler, Ralph Megson, who killed her so the angry villagers burned Wideacre Hall; John Lacey died (from a weak hear); John MacAndrew left for India; that left Celia Lacey to raise the two children, Julia Lacey and her cousin Richard MacAndrew, and to protect them from a family secret—they're sibbling/cousins.

BUT, we know Gregory...she's a master a putting a spin on crazy yams and a master of despair and lonely...and in The Favored Child, she kept thinking up all kinds of horrible things that could happen to Julia and Richard and throwing them into the plot. And, like most of Gregory's novels, this one was loooooooong (614 pages) and fulllll of detail. Julia's misery just goes on and on and on and Gregory really had me anxious for the end. I don't care how long it was, it was well written...but, there were a few points (like psychotherapists) and some words that seemed decidedly out of place, And while Gregory’s characters are colorful, I found them entirely transparent; the minute she introduces one, you know exactly how they are going to figure in the story. And, I had to remind myself this is an historical novel and consider the time and how women were seen and treated because I really wanted to whomp Julia (and her mother) up side of the head so many, many, many times for being such a wimp.

How in the world could Celia live with these kids 24/7 and not feel what way the wind was blowing? She was in such complete denial that I sat here thinking hello...get a clue. Because we learn right away that little Richard doesn't like being in second place, so while he makes Julia miserable with his bullying, telling his cousin not to put herself forward because it's unwomanly and who does she think she is anyway, he's winning the heart of the cook and pulling the wool over his Mama-Aunt Celia's eyes. And I wanted to pull every hair out of Celia's pretty head when she continues being completely oblivious to all the goings on since...she's busy stitching the linens together.

Since Beatrice ruined everything and their house burned down, they're kind of poor and are forced to live in the dower house; but they're not as poor as the people of Acre who don't have money or food or clothing and have their children taken away to work in factories. But, there's always hope; right? And Acre village is waiting for "The Favored Child" of Beatrice's blood to make everything better. BUT... they are joint heirs to the estate, an arrangement that gives Julia as much power as Richard and they are raised as cousins, ignorant of their true heritage (and so is Celia).

Since Richard is Beatrice's child, he would be the obvious choice. However, Richard isn't just a bully to Julia, the villagers hate that guy AND the animals hate him, which if you watch horror movies is a bad, bad sign, and he loves the land, but in a possessive way and yearns to be its sole squire. ALSO, his crimes get more and more outrageous as he matures and the book progresses.

Julia, Beatrice's other child, on the other hand, loves the land and is nice to people and animals, so everyone wants her to be the new squire. Plus, she inherited the Lacey Land Lust and thinks Wideacre is the Bestest Place on Earth. And, Julia has also inherited the sight.

To add another twist (and side story), Richard's dad, Dr. John MacAndrew (name is from page 2, "Beatrice's husband, Dr. John MacAndrew, went away to India..."), returns from India with enough money to get Wideacre out of the hole, build a new house, grow crops, and buy the family nice things again.

Yay! Everything is coming up roses!

No!!!

John hires Ralph Megson (readers of Wideacre will recognize him as Beatrice's gypsy lover) as the property manager and is totally clueless that he was The Culler from the last book..the one who brought Beatrice to her doom. Ralph tells Julia who he is and she's all oh, no, but doesn't tell anyone because the villagers really like him and she's not the one who rocks any boat. And we, the reader, like him because he really not a bad guy for a murdering Beatrice...right? He has a feeling about Julia and when she gets The Sight and saves the village, he's 100% in her corner. Unfortunately, Julia's family is not cool with her new-found talent and they send her off to Bath a doctor who brainwashes her but she still manages to find a nice normal life with friends and a man who loves her and who she loves....

BUT, don't all good things come to an end? Well, when she and her mother return to Wideacre, the shit hits the fan. Because they learn they're both Beatrice’s children, the products of her long incestuous affair with her brother. Don't secrets like this always rear their ugly heads at some point — just not soon enough...

This story is NOT for the weak of heart... let me say to anyone who hasn't read this book, be prepared to feel pretty miserable as you read the last chapters of this book— poor Julia's life is so burdened with tragedy, abuse, and misfortune that you can't help but feel affected.

CLUE: read those adjectives at the beginning of this review again...carefully.
Profile Image for Sherry.
18 reviews14 followers
February 29, 2008
2nd in the trilogy. Doesn't quite grab you like the first one. Seems like the brother is one of those pups that should have been drowned at birth.
Waiting to see what he does to screw up the protatagonists impending marriage.
Well, Richard is just completely insane, isn't he. And, as for Julia, I just kept screaming, "tell somebody, just tell somebody." Frustrating book to read.
354 reviews158 followers
December 31, 2015
I loved this book. I will give a full review on it later today. Stay tuned my GoodReads friends and family. Enjoy and Be Blessed.
Diamond
Profile Image for Samantha Trillium (Just Reading in the Rain)☂.
524 reviews72 followers
July 27, 2014
This book took a bit for me to get into at first. The first book in this trilogy (Wideacre), was just so intense that I actually had to read a couple of other books in between before I was ready to continue on.

I should also add, that seeing as this is book two, if you have not read book one, you probably shouldn't read on, as it will spoil the ending of Wideacre.

I was so upset at the ending of Wideacre, when Beatrice died. Aside from her gross love affairs with her idiot brother, I really loved Beatrice as a character, and even started routing for her near the end when it was obvious that she was not going to survive the riot attack. I thought that no other Lacey would ever compare to her, and that is why the second book took me a while to warm too... my favourite character was gone.

But as the story progressed, and it became clear that Julia was indeed the "favored child" I became interested once again.

So this story is all about Julia and Richard, the illegitimate bastard children of Beatrice and Harry Lacey. They do not know that they are brother and sister, and are brought up by Celia Lacey as cousins. During childhood Julia is a sweet and caring child, whose main ambition in life is to earn smiles from her mama. Richard on the other hand, shows disturbing signs of being cruel and sadistic person. He bullies his cousin Julia, and enjoys being able to smile and charm anyone he wants.

As these two grow up, it becomes clear who the favored child is. Julia begins to have dreams of Beatrice, (sometimes even becoming Beatrice herself) and has the same tenderness and need to be on the land of Wideacre. Richard, surprisingly, does not inherit anything from Beatrice. Some might argue his capacity for evil came from her, but I would not agree. Beatrice would NEVER abuse an animal, let alone kill one in the most painful way possible. Animals loved Beatrice. Animals fear Richard. He does not inherit her ability to ride. He is truly rotten to the core; what I had always pictured an incestuous child to be. Julia inherits all of Beatrice's good traits; none of her evil ones. In that, she is the Beatrice Beatrice should have grown up to be. She earns the respect of the Acre village, and earns the knowledge to bring the land to life.

An interesting character that I did not see coming back into the story was Ralph Megson, Beatrice's lover/killer. I really don't know how I feel about this guy. He is portrayed as a savior and a good person, but let us not forget that it was he who killed Beatrice's beloved father in the very first few pages of the first book. He was the catalyst that brought Beatrice into making the choices she made. Ralph also murdered Beatrice. He then comes back into this second book and befriends Julia, and tries to erase the line between the Quality, and the poor. So I have mixed feelings about this guy. I wonder if he is going to make an appearance in the final book.

So the final moments in the book were pretty intense. Richards confessions to all his evil deeds in childhood were never a mystery to the reader, but it definitely felt good to hear them voiced to Julia because she was a bit naive in everything Richard. Julia definitely made me angry on several occasions for being too stupid and gullible to realize that Richard was to blame. Especially the way she let him ruin her in the Summertime house. And how she allowed him to come between her and James. Holy crap that made me angry!!!

All in all though, very good book. I think I may have even enjoyed it more than the first one. This one in particular reminded me very slightly of the Gemma Doyle series, especially when Julia went to have her season in Bath, and was fighting with her premonitions and Sight. Love all these characters, whether they are naive and gullible, or vile and evil. The plots are plausible and believable and that is really important to me.
Profile Image for Leane.
293 reviews
April 12, 2010
Phillippa Gregory is a goddess! The Wideacre trilogy is fantastic! "Wideacre" was great, and this "The Favored Child" was very good as well. You feel so much for the characters. When Julia was happily in love with James, I was happy too. When she was depressed, I was depressed. I'm excited to see what the final book in the trilogy brings. I'm hoping there is finally a happy ending! Of course, some parts of this book were far fetched, like Julia turning into Beatrice and the moment in the summerhouse with Ralph...That was confusing. But the writing is so exquisite, how could I put it down? I have a feeling, sadly, that many people would find these stories to be slow, too wordy and descriptive, and too, well, incestuous. But I greatly enjoyed the beautiful descriptions of Wideacre. It truly brought real emotion to the reader. I guess that's why I can't stand "Twlight" and everyone else in the world loves them. They want action, short and simple sentences, and lots of drama. But Wideacre has drama alright! And beautiful, descriptive, emotional writing to go with it. Well done Phillippa!
May 12, 2021
I enjoyed this more than I thought I would. However, it's frustrating almost to the point of wanting to throw the book across the room, whilst being compelling enough to want to keep reading. It's like going back to someone who's good in bed, but you know is bad for you, and you should cut all contact.

Richard is just a character, but people like him absolutely exist, and this book made me appreciate the times I live in as a woman. It was also hard sometimes not to blame Julia, when in fact, she's just a victim of the situation, and I remember thinking to myself "if this doesn't have a happy ending, I'm going to be fucking ragin'". She deserved that.



It was very predictable, but I think it was supposed to be. It isn't a thriller, where you're supposed to follow the twists and turns, and figure out who the bad guy is. The fact that everything I'd suspected was true didn't bother me at all. They were more like breadcrumbs, and they all led to a shitty loaf of bullying bread.
Profile Image for Quinn.
13 reviews
November 13, 2012
I wasn't quite so keen on this one. As in, seriously, incest was weird in the first book, and totally unnecessary in this one. And the emotional abuse and guilt tripping of Julia by Richard was just not on. Plus, I didn't connect with the characters in the same way. In Beatrice, there were elements of her personality which I liked, or recognised from myself, like the fact that she's stubborn and knows her own mind. That made her relatable for me, meaning that even when she did some horrific things I would never approve of, I didn't stop liking her as a character. I didn't get that connection with the characters in this book. Julia I found to be weak and spineless, two things I don't respect in real people or fictional characters, and Richard was just an evil, abusive creature who should've been drowned at birth. The prose was sparkling as ever, but I just didn't follow the story as eagerly and I didn't like the people it was about.
Profile Image for Auj.
1,678 reviews118 followers
June 20, 2022
*4 stars for entertainment, but I did not like this book if that makes any sense

4 stars for the beginning, 3 for the middle (I started being a little bored, I think ~50 pages could have been cut easily), and 4 stars for the last ~300 pages when the book picked up again

I started reading this immediately after finishing "Wideacre" and loving it. I was super engrossed in it, and it was very hard to put down. I was reading it on Internet Archive, but I wanted to read it as a physical book. My book took way longer than I expected it to come to the library, then my mom picked up everything from the library except this book I was so desperate for (though the website had said the books had come in, my mom said it wasn't there). That's why it took me 7 days to read this book since I wanted to wait for the library copy to come in.

I loved Richard in "Wideacre". I hate how Philippa Gregory made him charming but cruel and selfish. I'm pretty sure he was a psychopath; Julia just thought that he was mad. Though I guess it had to be this way for the plot & the conflict. Back before he got too bad, I was waiting on bated breath anticipating the sibling incest 🤡 I assumed after the first book, surely there would be some more incest. I was like what is taking so long?? Harry & Beatrice were at it much sooner. Though in this case, Julia nor Richard knew they were actually siblings. I guess it was okay to marry your first cousin though??

Incest is not good obviously, but usually, the offspring turn out normal. That is until it is incest multiple times over. The pharaohs were inbred like that. King Tut, I'm pretty sure, was a product of some incest and that's why he was weak. In other words, it was ok for Harry and Beatrice to have kids because the kids turned out normal...well, I don't know about Richard, but physically fine. But Richard & Julia should definitely not have had any children together.

Then when Julia was taken to Bath to rid her mind of the Sight (I was not happy with John or Celia for that), she slowly fell in love with James. I eventually wanted her and James to be together and not her with her brother. Unfortunately, Wikipedia spoiled it for me when I just wanted a plot summary after finishing "Wideacre" to make sure I understood that Ralph killed Beatrice and told me that . I was wondering how that then was going to work when Julia was set to marry James? Well, So I guess Beatrice's idea of the joint heirs of Wideacre wasn't a good idea after all...I wonder if Beatrice would have approved of Richard's actions because like her, he did whatever possible to have full control of Wideacre.

I was kind of impressed that

I did enjoy "Wideacre" more than this book, and I pity anyone who skips Book 1 as it's the far superior book.
1 review
September 4, 2025
cant fault Philippa Gregory! Felt like grabbing the heroine by the shoulders and shouting "Really!". Now you'll have to read it to find out why 😉
Profile Image for Katherine.
842 reviews367 followers
January 13, 2014
description
"The favored child. The favored child. She always was the favored child."

Setting:Middlehurst, West Sussex, England; the late eighteenth century

Coverly Love?:I don't like it as well as the first cover, but it's still pretty, so overall yes.

Plot:It's been 11 years since Beatrice Lacey has ruined her beloved Wideacre. She leaves behind her daughter and son, Julia and Richard, to carry on the family name and run Wideacre. raised by their loving "Mama-Aunt" Celia, they are raised in the lands ruins while they learn the ways of the land. But the villagers are whispering; one of them is the favored child. Only one of them can feel the land and be connected by it. And over those tumultuous years, Richard and Julia will struggle for power over the control of Wideacre. Yet they do not know of their past, of their mother's past.

Well, this wasn't nearly as crazy as the first book (I don't know whether to be glad over that or not), but it was still nevertheless crazy. Beatrice passed down the crazy genes to her children, that's for sure. The plot was very fast moving and with lots of drama. Old characters reappear, and the themes of revenge, redemption and greed run rampant. Nevertheless, this book had me hopelessly engrossed, and I was helpless as I turned the pages to find out what would happen next.

Characters:Julia Lacey is widely regarded by the villagers as the favored child; the one who is destined to take over Wideacre. Julia was absolutely nothing like her mother, thank God. But she was also a very weak-willed character, forgiving her cousin/brother's sins way too easily and putting the blame on herself to much of the time. I wanted to shake her and tell her to get away, he was bat-shit psycho. The one admiration I have to her is for saving her daughter from a life of madness, which have her some sort of redemption,

Richard... oh my goodness, he was messed up. He was just like/if not worse than his mommy dearest. He stopped at nothing to stay in power with Wideacre, from murder to incest (yet again). He earns no sympathy at all, and he's truly a monster.

Pros:Philippa Gregory sure knows how to spin a great tale, and she never fails to engross the reader in her sordid character's lives.

Cons:I did not like Julia's weakness and passiveness as a character. She was not nearly as strong as Beatrice, and I was hoping that she would have a stronger and bolder personality.

Love Triangle?:Yes; Richard vs. Julia vs. James, a kindly suitor. Richard quashes this romance like a bug.

Insta-Love?;Nope!

A Little Romance?:Richard and Julia fall in love as children (but they don't realize they are brother and sister). She later falls in love with James, but Richard the psychopath doesn't like this one bit, so he effectively puts and end to it.

Conclusion:I'm almost afraid to find out what the heck is going to happen next, but I will find out nonetheless. I would strongly recommend this series for it's drama and action.

Read This!:Wideacre and Meridon by Philippa Gregory, the other two books in this series. And for your crazy family fix, read Flowers in the Attic by V.C. Andrews.
Profile Image for Kathryn Bashaar.
Author 2 books109 followers
October 1, 2021
This is the second book in the Wideacre series. As the story opens, the Wideacre mansion is in ruins, the estate impoverished and the residents of the dependent town of Acre starving. Brother and sister Harry and Beatrice Lacey destroyed the estate with their incestuous love and their possessive passion for the land.

Harry and Beatrice are now dead, but the bitterness between the Lacey family and their tenants and town remains. Harry's widow Celia and Beatrice's widower John are left to raise the children and try to restore the estate and mend relations with the tenants and the town. Julia Lacey believes herself to be the child of Harry and Celia. Richard MacAndrew believes that he is the son of John and Beatrice. In fact, both children are products of Harry's and Beatrice's incest.

As Richard and Julia grow up, they have a childish romance, believing that they are only first cousins. Julia seems to have inherited Beatrice's passion for the land, her ability to feel its heartbeat. Raised by gentle Celia and mentored by the estate's new egalitarian manager, Julia also develops a love for the dependents of the estate, and, through her, John's and Celia's efforts, relations are restored. Julia also has the gift of Sight. She can sense what is about to happen and, in one dramatic incident, has a prophetic dream.

Richard, by contrast, seems to have no real feel for the land, its animals or its people. And he is often away at school. John and Celia gently discourage the romance between the "cousins" and Julia falls in love with an eligible young man from Bristol, who adores her in return. Both Julia's future and the future of the estate and its dependents looks bright.

But Julia, Celia and John have failed to reckon with Richard. Richard will do anything to ensure that he is the master of the reviving estate. After a series of shocking tragedies, Julia finds herself fighting for her life, her estate and her sanity.

This book isn't just about a fight over an estate, though. It is also a feminist novel in which Julia, in fits and starts, breaks out of the submissive role of an eighteenth-century woman and learns to think for herself and defend herself. It is also brutal portrayal of the powerlessness of women in eighteenth-century England, and a cry of protest. As I've often said in reviews of her other books, Gregory is a real master of both psychology and history.

Like the first book in the series, Wideacre, this one is a real page-turner. And it ends on a triple cliff-hanger that makes me very anxious to read the next book in the series.

The only thing that didn't ring true for me was Ralph Megson's return as estate manager and Julia's mentor. In the first book, he is a villain who murders Beatrice's father and, ultimately, Beatrice herself. In this book he is suddenly a kindly mentor, without adequate explanation. And then at the end he turns savage again. He's a likable character in this book, but, taken as whole, his character just doesn't make sense.

Like my reviews? Check out my blog at http://www.kathrynbashaar.com/blog/
Author of The Saints Mistress https://camcatbooks.com/Books/T/The-S...
Profile Image for Jessica Halleck.
171 reviews48 followers
July 11, 2015
I loved this. When I wasn't reading it, I was thinking about it. This trilogy owns me hook, line, and sinker.

The Favored Child's main strength and its primary weakness is its connection to the first book, Wideacre. It relies on a similar pattern, plotwise, and very much on the legacy of Beatrice Lacey. This combination is at its absolute strongest in the book's second act when Julia Lacey is flourishing, learning to use her Lacey magic to triumphantly be everything that Beatrice should have been. When she breaks, the Beatrice connection all but breaks too, and the climax that we saw coming from the beginning is a bit deflated. Because we've known who the true villain is from the start, we've seen the pattern of Julia being manipulated, and where the fall of Beatrice was phenomenal to experience from her own point of view in the first book, having the madness manifest in a supporting character who has so obviously been heading that way from birth comes across here as flat.

That being said: with minimal exceptions, Julia's role as a victim of abuse is handled very well. The personal, moral, and societal pressures that feed her guilt and cause her to bury herself beyond rescue make complete sense and I challenge anyone who whines about what a doormat she is to endure manipulation and trauma of that calibre and have the wherewithal to recognize it rationally and the strength, unsupported, to stop it before it spirals out of control.

The exceptions have to do with a couple incidents where horrific things happened and...Julia just immediately moves on with her life. No uneasiness or residual horror is described. Just on to May Day! (Otherwise, all emotional and reactionary bases were covered as far as I'm concerned.)

The letter-cum-epilogue felt like

Regardless of my qualms, I'm a fan of this series. It's written gorgeously and is twisted in all the right places. There are even moments of intelligent social commentary and well-handled psychology.

I look forward to book three and giving some of Gregory's other historical fiction a second chance.
42 reviews2 followers
November 8, 2012
Weirdly addictive, but twisted book. While appalled at what I was reading, couldn't put it down.
What is happening in the book is indeed quite outrageous, but I could just as well get over the more icky parts - stuff like that never bothered me in literature, it makes things a bit more spicy. What I cannot actually believe, or understand is how the main character could be so spineless and st00pid.

Why was there any admiration from the village in the first place? Julia never once put her foot down in a serious manner and was one of the least powerful characters, always bending to the others' will. Was Beatrice's strength reflected in her ....surely if everybody in the book was repeating that readers would have noticed too?

Instead we get a girl that has no will of her own and will let her bullying brother step over her despite her so called power over the village and the land.

Also hard to believe was how easy scheming was for evil, little Richard and later on evil, grown-up Richard. It is again, not believable that nobody was able to see through him and thought him charming and harmless.

Other than that, all the premonitions and references to the "sight" were a bit too much, the book was already hard to digest and with a supernatural element added to the f*cked up events already taking place, it made all seem even more unbelievable. Especially since the mythology in the previous book was of another nature.

Sadly, I will also probably read the last book. Hopefully, it won't be as bad, as the style of writing is quite enjoyable and one is drawn quite easily into the book. Despite hating the action and the characters, I kept on reading it, so if you're in for some twisted plots and characters, you might as well pick this book up. You will probably feel outraged, disgusted and flabbergasted at times but at least you'll be entertained all the while.
Profile Image for Teresa.
12 reviews
June 10, 2014
Where to start?

I began reading The Favoured Child a few weeks after I finished Wideacre. And at times I felt as if it were a tired, dragged on retelling of the first book.

The author's language is maddeningly repetitive. The book could have done a lot better without the endless descriptions of the land and the water and how beautiful and fertile and awesome it was...Like I get the point!

Although it was a gripping read, and the ending was heartwrenching, I was simply tired by the mindlessly torturous, macabre treatment of the characters.

And the deaths of John and Celia were just so...sudden and unprecedented. I felt as if many events in the book just...happened with little warning.

But I loved how The Favoured Child wrapped up some things from Wideacre(especially concerning Ralph), and Beatrice's appearance at the end.

I don't think I'll be reading Meridon, however. There is only so much of the Wideacre Trilogy that a person can take at a time.
Profile Image for Paula Berinstein.
Author 67 books359 followers
May 27, 2016
This is one of the best books I have ever read! Enthralling, compelling, and torturous, after about the first fifty pages it takes off and never stops. I just had to get to the end, so desperate was I to find out what was going to happen, and yet I dreaded finishing, for I wanted never to stop reading. Sometimes I was so wrung out that I felt that I was being reduced to jelly. I would give it ten stars if I could. Be forewarned, though: because of its dark themes, it is not for everyone. But if you enjoy darkness, you absolutely must read this book!

While I have greatly enjoyed the author's books about English and Scottish royalty, I feel that this one stands head and shoulders above them. I understand that it is the middle book of a trilogy. I had no trouble understanding what was going on, however, and am anxious--no, hungry--to read the other two volumes.
Profile Image for Axie Barclay.
30 reviews6 followers
December 7, 2010
Picking up where Wideare left off, The Favored Child loses no momentum as is as amazing as the first installment of Philippa Gregory’s Lacey saga.

Julia Lacey, joint heir to the Wideacre estate, tells the story of her family, her aunt Beatrice who ruined Wideacre, and her and her cousin’s, Richard, attempts to revitalize the estate again. But things go horribly wrong with the tragic death of a horse and a hawk, which see what the adults should have seen all along.

Love, cruelty, unexpected family legacies, and the unique magic of Wideacre permeate the pages as the specter of the Lacey’s incest emerges from an idyllic past. Don’t miss this second installment, or the third and final book, Meridon, which concludes the Wideacre series.
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