Well-told Love Story between an Irish Coleen and a British Officer--
Set in Ireland, possibly the late 18th or early 19th century (no date is given but it’s after the Rebellion of 1798 as it’s referred to), this is the story of Rhiannon Fitzgerald, who before her father died, lost their beloved Primrose Cottage to an English landlord. Her father, a barrister, had never been very good at making a living but he loved his daughter and he loved the Irish fairy stories. Before he died, he told Rhiannon her mother was a fairy who had returned to the magical kingdom. Now that she is grown, Rhiannon knows he made those things up to give a young child a good memory of a mother who wasn’t there. She lives in a gypsy wagon with the hurt animals she tends. One day at the standing stones, she comes across a wounded British officer, Captain Lionel Redmayne, who had been fleeing an assassination attempt. Of course, she takes him in and that begins the change in a hardened man whose childhood was full of pain, owing to a cruel, manipulative grandfather.
Cates takes a lot of time developing the emotions that run between Rhiannon and Lion and some of the lower reviews on Amazon reflect the readers’ frustration with that occupying so much of the story. A treacherous plot swirls around Lion but for much of the story that is only alluded to. Still, Cates holds our interest even though not much of Ireland’s history is given. She does reflect the tension between the Irish and the British soldiers and Lion’s regret for his often ruthless actions in the past. For me, this novel had a few themes: the importance of a loving father and the healing power of love, each well presented. I can recommend it.