Needed that Epiphany Moment
I believe I've read all of this author’s books in her Other Pens series. Until this one, I thoroughly enjoyed them. I've been reading this author’s JAFF for years, and her typical writing style appeals to me as a lover of historical romance, and in particular, Jane Austen fanfiction. Her language is elevated, but not overly much, and the little conversations she creates between the characters, to my mind, seem to be what would be very typical for lords and ladies of the era, removed as they are from life's harshest difficulties. What I've particularly enjoyed in this series is how near the beginning, one main character has a believable epiphany about the type of person they've been before and how they want to change (and why they may want to do so) in the future to be a better person. I'm a massive fan of well-done redemption stories. Perhaps I was put a little off-kilter by how this book didn't really start with Tom's epiphany. Rather, it starts sometime after that when he is just starting to put himself—and his squandered brother’s fortune—to rights and mend his ways. I would have loved to have seen that moment of epiphany, perhaps after Tom doing or thinking of some rapscallion thing! The heroine is an intriguing character, but she seemed a little too far out of keeping with what would be common for a young lady in her circumstances. Contemporary authors often push that envelope too far, creating a character who would be unlike one truly back in the day, and I feel that happened here. Still, I could enjoy the writing for simply being good writing, even if the characters and the story did not quite do it for me.
I received a free digital copy of this book, but that did not affect my review.