After trading his tranquil Staten Island existence for a flat in the city and an editorial position at the New York Herald, William Nesmith anticipates as easy and uneventful a transition from bachelorhood to marriage—as soon as he's prepared to ask the vivacious Violet Chapin for her hand. Though Violet longs to climb the social ladder Will scorns, she seems willing to wait for him—and wait she must, for Will intends to make his way without the assistance of Violet's well-to-do connections.
Whether that's a vow he can keep comes into question when he runs afoul of Charlie Kohlbeck, a capricious reporter with a keen eye for a story and the flexible ethics to dig up any secret, whether hidden in Manhattan's darkest corners or the grand marble halls of its social elite. When Will is ordered to work with him so they'll come to better appreciate each other's talents, Charlie takes him along on the hunt for an interview with the elusive Lord Belcourt. It's a meeting every reporter in town is after, but Charlie gains an audience by introducing Will as one of the wealthy California Nesmiths—a lie that sets Will on a path up the social ladder at a speed no respectable gentleman could stomach.
Offered his own society column if he prolongs the charade, Will wants nothing more than to escape the bevy of eager debutantes on his trail and make peace with a very vexed Violet. But when he helps a shy heiress menaced by swindlers, he's caught in a tangled web turned dangerous and must put his faith in Charlie Kohlbeck—who may possibly prove the one road to ruin Will is defenseless to resist.
DISCLOSURE. Over the years this author had become a dear email friend. I fell in love with her books first, but of course take a possible bias into consideration and ignore this review if you must. I just cannot be bothered to deny myself a pleasure of talking about her stories :).
I did buy this book.
Review.
"There were better ways to waste a Wednesday evening in the middle of a mild November, and however agreeable the view from the Herald’s second floor down to busy Broadway, Charlie had seen it too many times in the past two years to find it as entertaining, even with holiday shoppers staggering against the bracing wind like hapless blackbirds."
This is how the book starts and when Will comes to apply for editorial position, he and Charlie don't exactly hit it off :). They don't hit it off, because Charlie while not saying explicitly that he is Will's potential boss, does not disabuse him of mistaken assumption. More over, he offers Will an editorial test on the spot and gives Will his own article to edit. Let's just say that Will is a very good and very strict editor :). The only trope that ever attracted me in romance had always been "from friends to enemies", but I always wanted to see real reasons why the guys would not like each other in the beginning of the book, and I have not seen it that often lately. It made perfect sense to me that the reporter who likes to write long winded sentences would not care for the editor who likes to um, cut those sentences down a lot :).
But work together they must, moreover when their boss sees that their bickering continues, he assigns them to work on the story together, specifically to chase after the interview with Lord Belcourt and as blurb tells you in order to get into Manhattan High Society Charlie had a bright idea to use the fact that Will's last name is the same last name as another famous family has. And then supposedly rich and famous will talk to them and they can print all kinds of stories without letting people know that they are reporters who are chasing after news.
Of course when one starts a rucus, one usually can never quite anticipate where it will take them.
Will has a woman he wants to marry who had been his friend for ten years , and whose patience is growing thin and when he is pretending to be somebody who is not, other women start paying attention. While him and Charlie started the charade only wanting to find out about what is happening in Lord Belcourt's personal life, they stumble upon several dangerous developments and stories that public truly needed to know about.
I gobbled this book in three or four hours. I will go back eventually, but it was just such lovely fun that I could not stop. I usually end up loving the guys Tamara Allen writes about, but some of them took a bit longer to fall in love with. These two come alive from the first pages and they are full of such joy even when Will was still a little bit closed off.
Of course they fall in love and it made sense to me that during the course of several months they got to know each other better and saw their real selves so to speak.
"And one of those dangers, he realized, was sitting beside him. Somewhere along the line, he and Charlie had become comfortable with each other. He’d come to trust Charlie out of sheer necessity and… They’d somehow become friends. The revelation caught Will off guard, but he couldn’t think there was anything to make of the fond look Charlie had given him, nor the shoulder pressed companionably against his. It was the most innocent kind of leaning, really. He wouldn’t imagine otherwise, not when he felt too susceptible to something more."
And their bickering became humorous to me pretty fast:
“It’s hardly a crime to be aggressive and persistent.” The corners of Will’s lips twitched. “Really, I’d think you’d admire a fellow who has the same sort of push and perseverance you do.” “Not as much as I admire your talent for backhanded compliments.” Charlie settled further into the pillows, making a half-hearted effort to keep his eyes open. “You’d better be kind to a fellow on the verge of pneumonia. I’m of a mind to dress right now and take you to Mrs. Glasspoole’s party just to teach you a lesson.”"
I loved most secondary characters too. I never expect to see evil caricature women in Tamara Allen's books, but since according to the blurb Violet was Will's love interest initially I was a little bit worried as to how she will be dealt with. I should not have worried, I thought it was very well done. I also liked Rose and Charlotte, and Rose's mother.
Of course I pick up romance book to read about the romance first and foremost, but I also always appreciated that Tamara Allen lets me time travel to the New York in the second half of the 19 century. The work of the newspaper people at that time, the restaurants, the concerts, the overall scene - loved it. So very much.