The year is 1816, the British troops are back from the war and Napoleon is safely confined to the distant island of Elba. London is coming back to life. For some the times are good and for others they are bad and for either the future prospects won’t be changing anytime soon.
Lady Pearl Moreston, daughter of the Duke of Oakshire, has passed the traditional age for a young girl to wed. This isn’t due to a lack of suitors. She would be hard put to count, on both hands, the marriage proposals she has received and refused. Lady Pearl has other plans and doesn’t want to get lost in the glitter of the ton. As an intelligent, well-educated, opinionated, and socially conscious woman, she is interested in the people outside Oakshire House, Berkley Square and her upper-class neighborhood of Mayfair. She is interested in the lives of the common men, women, and children that bore the brunt of the recent war and now toil to reestablish a life in the aftermath. Her dream, her calling in life, as you will, is to quietly retire to Fairbourne, the smallest of her father’s estates and independently run it.
Lady Obelia, Duchess of Oakshire and Pearl’s stepmother, has plans of her own and they in no way coincide with those of her stepdaughter. She is scheming to marry her stepdaughter off to a titled suitor, leaving her husband’s titles and estates intact for her son and the Duke’s only male heir. To protect herself and glean social knowledge not contained in books, she steals herself away, with the aid of her handmaid, in the dead of night, into greater London, to see for herself how the less fortunate fair. This act of social defiance sets her on an adventure she would never have dreamed of.
Luke St. Clair is a scoundrel, rogue, villain, highwayman, and thief and like Robin Hood, he steals from the rich to give to the poor. He grew up outside of London and witnessed, first hand, the injustice that prevails in England. The rich and titled landowners have little or no thought, compassion, or charity for the tenant farmers that provide them their wealth. He too has a calling. He is willing to risk his life and liberty to relieve, in some part, the suffering that surrounds him.
These two people, from opposite ends of the social spectrum, meet and magic occurs……
The tales of Robin Hood and the Prince and the Pauper are combined to create this story of love, passion, and adventure. The long buildup to a union of both bodies and mind was disappointing anticlimactically written, leaving me wanting. I feel that the story could have more actual historical content and at times the characters and their situations didn’t seem to ring true, but as a whole it was entertaining, forming a good autumn afternoon read in front of the fireplace. My final word on this book is that it could have been much, much more…..
I have always loved the written word. Language, any language is a living thing that develops and mutates with the passing of time. It grows and expands, with the creation of new words, while retaining the old. I’ve always held the belief that a large and well-rounded vocabulary is a sure sign of a good education. Many books these days don’t challenge their readers with refreshing ways of saying something. Brenda Hiatt has succeeded in throwing down the gauntlet and incorporating seldom used but nevertheless colorful and intriguing words to turn a phrase. What I missed in raw passion was more than made up by a cacophony of delightfully rare words.