The Dowager Countess of Marwood summons her grandson Adam Penrose, Duke of Stratton, and she orders him that to solve the long-time feud between their family and the Cheswicks, he should marry the granddaughter, Emilia. Adam wants to avenge the wrongs done to his family, so be it; he doesn’t care. Adam is not precisely enthralled by Emilia however, but when he sees her older sister Clara, it’s another matter; the indomitable Clara might just make him more amenable to a political union. Clara is a spinster; nobody has proposed to her because she is believed to be quite difficult, and it suits her just fine. Adam’s reputation as a dangerous man precedes him, he is not dangerous to women, but after a while, Clara is not so sure about that.
THE MOST DANGEROUS DUKE IN LONDON was my first incursion into the magnificence of Madeline Hunter’s oeuvre, and it won’t be my last. Oh my, this is a marvellous book! The very beginning grabbed my attention right away, and it only got better from then on. Clara is a true manifestation of feminine power: she has her own home, she is the publisher of a journal, she is independently wealthy; she is a force of nature. Adam is quite a novel character: he is handsome, titled, well-off, and the marriage-minded mamas don’t shove their daughters at him. His reputation is based on facts: he has fought duels when he was in France, and there are family matters he won’t discuss which also affect his demeanour. While there is some initial attraction between Adam and Clara, she sees him as a major inconvenience in her life, and he sees her only as a means to an end; there is definitely no insta-anything there.
THE MOST DANGEROUS DUKE IN LONDON has two strong angles to the story: while it is a romance, and a splendid one at that, the story of Adam looking into his father’s misfortune is riveting, and the resolution took me entirely by surprise; it was glorious. I could go on and on about the wonderfully drawn characters that are Clara, Adam, Emilia, the terrifying Dowager Countess, and the other two delectable dukes of the Decadent Dukes Society: Brentwood and Langford. The dialogues were just as fabulous as everything else in this book: the men’s conversations sounded natural and masculine, while Clara and Emilia came across as loving sisters.
Adam and Clara have one of the oddest courtships I have ever read, it felt entirely genuine and it was simply wonderful! There is no silly bickering; there is nothing silly or implausible at all, in fact, in THE MOST DANGEROUS DUKE IN LONDON. The romance between Adam and Clara slowly smoulders until it becomes a full-fledged blaze, and the sex scenes are extremely sensuous, beautiful and while not very explicit, the pillow talk is erotic, playful, and utterly sublime. I also thoroughly enjoyed a look at Regency women who had a life, outside of the home, and in a realistic way. Madeline Hunter’s prose is perfection itself: elegant, subdued, nuanced, and so smooth, I barely had the impression I was reading; I was buried in this wonderfully imagined world. Towards the end, I also realised that the author does not dwell excessively on the characters’ physical attributes, for which I am ever so grateful.
THE MOST DANGEROUS DUKE IN LONDON is a feast for the mind, and also for the eyes, because of Madeline Hunter’s mastery at stringing words and sentences together to present her fictional world in such vivid colour. THE MOST DANGEROUS DUKE IN LONDON was a most joyous discovery, and to say that I am eagerly awaiting the next two instalments in the Decadent Dukes Society series would be a major understatement. What a glorious read this was!
I voluntarily reviewed an advanced reader copy of this book.