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A Chance Encounter

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A rash decision changes their lives Lord Humphrey Dewesbury doesn't want to offer for the annoying Augusta Ratcliffe, but the alliance was concocted when they were children. Joan Chadwick, an orphaned vicar's daughter, faces a dreary life as a governess. Neither wants to embrace their separate fates. What could be more logical than for them to save each other? There's just one problem to overcome - famiiy expectations. A light-hearted marriage of convenience Regency Romance.

183 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1991

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About the author

Gayle Buck

55 books18 followers
Gayle Buck has freelanced for regional publications, worked for a radio station and as a secretary. Until recently, she was involved in public relations for a major Texas university. Besides her Regencies, she also writes fantasy and romantic suspense. She lives in Bandera, Texas.

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5 stars
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41 (33%)
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39 (31%)
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Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Preeti ♥︎ Her Bookshelves.
1,462 reviews18 followers
November 23, 2017
A traditional regency which gets painfully slow after an interesting beginning.
The H, on way to his family seat to formally announce his betrothal to his godparents’ daughter, runs down the h and while rescuing her from the ditch suddenly decides to abduct her to Gretna Green – to marry her.

No, it’s not a case of instalove, rather he detests his beautiful but bossy would be fiancée who has been forced upon him through a promise made between the parents and godparents to cement their friendship.
The h/H get married as she couldn’t very well go back after vanishing for a night from her guardians home. All well and good till here. But hereon it drags and becomes a family drama with very little spotlight on the h/H.

I still ploughed on, as it was still bearable in a chaotic and dysfunctional regency family way – with camps drawn up along rigid loyalty lines. The ow was as self absorbed and bitchy as they come. Entertaining as she was, I had no interest in seeing to her hea as well. But the author seemed quite honor bound about it. Okay, I capitulated but when her suitor turned out to be an attractive and intriguing rakehell who puts the very beta H to complete shade AND has been passionately and hopelessly in love with the b*tch since forevaa, I mentally walked away!
Beta and now vanilla too!
Profile Image for Caz.
3,276 reviews1,181 followers
November 20, 2024
D+ / 2.5 stars

This month’s theme – It Came From the 1990s – prompted me to trawl through my collection of nineties Signet Regencies. Gayle Buck’s A Chance Encounter dates from 1991, but unfortunately, it doesn’t hold up as well as some of the other traditional regencies I’ve read dating from that period.

On reaching his majority – and on what he fears is his last day of freedom – Edward Dewesbury, Viscount Humphrey, procures a special license and then goes on a bender and gets massively drunk. He was betrothed at the age of five to the baby daughter of his godparents, the Ratcliffes, but sadly, Augusta has grown up to be a spoiled brat who constantly brags about how she has only to click her fingers and her tame viscount will come running. Humphrey (he’s usually referred to by this name) has no thought of going against his parents wishes, no matter how much he dislikes his bride-to-be, so he’s heading home to fulfil his obligations, his one stipulation that the wedding take place right away – no build up, no big congratulatory parties.

Still three sheets to the wind, he’s driving along a country lane on the way to his house when a moment’s inattention causes him to narrowly avoid running down a pedestrian – who has to jump into a ditch to avoid being knocked over. Humphrey brings his carriage to a halt immediately and goes to apologise, helping the young woman out of the ditch. He takes her up with him and then has the brilliant (he thinks) idea of carrying her off to Gretna Green to get married. After all, if he’s already married, he can’t marry the awful Augusta, can he?

Vicar’s daughter Joan Chadwick is not at all pleased at this suggestion and does her best to persuade Lord Humphrey of the ridiculousness of his plan. He’s still set on the idea and refuses to let her down until they reach the inn where he’d planned to stop for the night – but as he sobers up, he realises what he’s done by insisting Joan remain with him and what trouble it could cause for her. There’s only one thing an honourable man can do. That it still means he won’t have to marry Augusta is a definite plus – and he has a special license in his pocket so they can tie the knot immediately.

The book gets off to a decent – if predictable – start and the two leads are likeable, despite Humphrey’s drunken high-handedness and refusal to let Joan leave. They spend a few hours getting to know each other a little, and there’s clearly a spark of attraction there, although it doesn’t really get the chance to become much more. Joan is a sensible, good-hearted young woman who is down-on-her-luck; her father died eight months earlier, and although he was respected and well-liked in their village and Joan had hoped this would translate into one of the parishoners offering her a home, that did not transpire. Feeling uncomfortable remaining there as a constant reproof to her father’s flock, Joan went to stay with family friends while she looked for paid employment, even though she knows she is not well suited to be a companion or governess. Being offered a completely different life from the one she’d expected comes as a shock, of course, and she knows she should refuse the viscount’s more considered proposal of marriage. Yet life as the wife of a wealthy nobleman is a far more tempting prospect than the life of drudgery before her – and marriage is infinitely preferable to having to endure the shame of the scandal that will attach to her name after she has spent so long in the company of a single man. Joan accepts Humphrey’s proposal and they are married straight away.

After the brief ceremony, Humphrey realises that he can't just present his marriage as a fait accompli to his parents, and that Joan needs a little time to accustom herself to her new circumstances, so he decides to take her to his grandmother’s for a short visit.

Lady Cassandra is one of those formidable grande dames so often encountered in historical romance – the older woman who has been there, done that, and who doesn’t give a stuff for convention or what anybody thinks of her. She suggests that Humphrey and Joan should delay giving news of their marriage and instead say they are betrothed as a way of easing Humphrey’s parents into accepting that he will not be marrying Augusta. Joan, in particular, doesn’t like the idea of lying, but they both agree to go along with it. As it turns out, Joan’s reception is even worse than she – and Humphrey – had anticipated, and she’s made to feel very unwelcome when they arrive at the Dewesbury estate. Humphrey does his best to protect her from the worst of it, but his parents behave like spoiled brats – his father flounces off to shoot whatever he can on the estate and his mother is very frosty; she does come around fairly soon, but only because she jumps to the wrong conclusions about Joan. Lady Ratcliffe is a snooty cow, Augusta is the same and Lady Cassandra is later revealed to have engineered the whole situation for her own amusement. The best of them is Lord Ratcliffe, whose quiet understanding and dry humour help to balance out the childishness of the other supposed adults.

My biggest problem with the book is that there’s hardly any romance in it. The portion of the novel that takes place at the Dewesbury home is by far the largest (probably three-quarters), but Joan and Humphrey spend hardly any time together so they don’t get to build on the getting-to-know-you phase they’d begun the night they met. From that first twenty percent or so, they seem well-suited – Humphrey is a decent chap and Joan has a backbone and a good sense of humour - but while there are a couple of nice moments where a casual touch engenders a frisson of attraction, there’s no real chemistry between the pair so the romance is perfunctory at best. And at times – this is a criticism I’ve levelled before at older romances - Humphrey feels more like a secondary character than a romantic hero.

Perhaps A Chance Encounter might have worked better for me had I realised it was more a comedy of manners than a romance (although even that’s stretching it a bit), but as a romance it was disappointing.
Profile Image for Lyuda.
539 reviews177 followers
November 30, 2014
If you are fan of Downton Abbey, I think you would like the story. Yes, it's set in a totally different time period but it has a soap opera feel to it. The main characters were very likable; their interactions (when it happened) were lovely. I just wish there was more of them. The secondary characters were well developed, specially, the hilariously scheming grandmother.
Profile Image for Brian Sirith.
253 reviews16 followers
October 11, 2025
Loved it. Loved it. Loved it.

Nice, polite, beta hero. Sensible, sweet heroine. Amazing, annoying grandma. Picked this up cause I was tired of the anachronistic 'strong' heroines and wanted a down to earth practical heroine of her time. The heroine is a vicar's daughter and I thought she might be interesting. She is a lovely person, smart, educated, independent, realistic. I was not disappointing.

Its clean and mostly focuses on family relations. I enjoyed way the two meet, the balanced relationship that develops between them, the family members and basically everything. Its easy to read. Its pleasant. No overly dramatic backstories, just everyday people. And one of my favorite story lines: when the hero and the heroine get together early on and like each other and the story revolves about them solving a problem together. I love that :)

If you're looking for nice, mild, pleasant main characters and the story of how they deal with the family, this is it. If you're looking for drama, intensity and hot romance, not for you.

Will be reading more of this author.
537 reviews10 followers
August 31, 2014
Lady Cassandra's action made no sense except to prolong the book, no reasons except her being a hateful old lady are given. the side characters outshine the main characters in personality, Loved Lord Ratcliffe, father of the shunned fiancée, his understanding and dry humour helped move the book along.
Profile Image for book_bear.
223 reviews60 followers
January 1, 2020
I've read this book 3 times! It is awesome if you like Jane Austen or Regency romance!
2,318 reviews11 followers
January 17, 2022
Fresh and Funny!
It is truly a privilege to read or listen to this author's stories. This one is fresh, filled with funny moments, has some really interesting and well constructed characters and a slow smoldering romance.
I love the sweet comradery between Humphrey and Joan. Add to this a conniving and calculating grandmother and you can expect something very out of the ordinary. And then we have Augusta, um, well yes, Augusta who wants Humphrey because she just wants him!
I listened to a promotional copy of the audiobook narrated by the very talented Julia Eve who lends her versatile voice-ability to enhance this production. An absolute pleasure to listen to!
My voluntary review, based on my person thoughts, is unbiased and recorded above.
Profile Image for Anne Patkau.
3,715 reviews69 followers
April 14, 2021
Lord Humphrey rode drunk to propose to Miss Ratcliffe, when he ran naive orphan Joan, daughter of late vicar, off road and honor demands he shift target. Typos 2.7striken IS stricken 4.1man IS than 8.8tightness IS rightness 8.10mink IS think 10.7um IS urn 10.25bad IS had 25.9Seville IS Neville
319 reviews
March 1, 2025
Not a ton of romance between the main characters but interesting family members.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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