Okay, I agree that it is slightly ridiculous to be giving such a fluffy, Christmasy book a five star rating, but it really was a good one. I found it so sweet, fun, delightful and pleasant that I couldn't bring myself to rate it any lower.
Elisabeth Fairchild has a very unique writing style, one that feels almost poetic at times. I quite enjoyed it; it gave a nice feel to the story and felt refreshing after the other more contemporary-written Regency I'd been reading. Fairchild's prose went so well with all the talk of Christmas preparations and parties, and silver surprises and plum pudding. It was such a feel-good book!
Miss Jane Nichol was pluck to the backbone, courageous, generous and selfless. Having escaped her step-family to prevent getting married to the old, repugnant Baron Blomefield, she flees to Bath where she disguises and powders herself into middle-aged French seamstress Madame Nicolette, and makes a living as a dressmaker. Ignore the part on the back cover where it says that she lives as Jane Nichol by night...because she doesn't. At least not right away, except for that one time where she decides on a whim to wear one of Fanny Fowler's unworn ball gowns, and shows up to the Assembly Rooms where she proceeds to turn every man's head, including recently single Edward Brydges.
Edward Brydges, the Duke of Chandrose, is tall, dark, handsome, elegant and refined, and your definition of a starchy, prim-and-proper, no-nonsense, imperious duke. (*insert dreamy sigh here*) With an income that would make Mrs. Bennet fall into a coma (100,000 A YEAR!), and newly reacquired state of bachelor, he is probably the most eligible catch in all of England. Dutiful, polite and respectful, Edward is also a great philanthropist and devotes much of his time helping at the local hospital and giving money to all sorts of charities. (*more sighs*)
Having jilted his fiancée (Fanny Fowler) within two weeks of the wedding, (which I still don't totally get -- aren't men NOT supposed to jilt their fiancées??! His doing so didn't even raise that much talk...and it wasn't like he had a plausible reason either, in the eyes of the ton. It was a strictly personal issue. It wasn't as though Fanny was psycho or something! I guess he got away with it because he's a duke with freaking 100,000 a year? Still, it made me wish Edward Ferrars had taken a chance sooner and dumped that Lucy Steele!) Eddie is at his most brooding when Jane meets him for the first time, clad in her dazzling ball gown. She demands he pays for his ex's trousseau, because it had taken a heck of a time and material for Mme Nicolette to make it, and hang it all, she needed the money to get more supplies and continue into her business.
The duke has no sooner set foot in Madame's shop than he suspects something is fishy. He figures out Jane's charade almost immediately, and because he wishes to forget about Fanny and finds himself attracted to Jane, he decides to investigate and find out why she is leading a double life. This leads to secret meetings between himself and Miss Nichol at dawn at the baths (finally a book set in Bath where there are actually scenes with characters bathing!), and the beginning of a most promising and tension-filled relationship between a duke and a dressmaker.
Edward and Jane had tons of gorgeous and romantic scenes, and the overall book was a delight. The ending was a bit bizarre though, and didn't seem to match the rest of the book, but it was sweet anyways. I LOVED the Christmas feels throughout! All the silver surprises, jingling bells, beautiful wreaths and Jane's bling-bling plum-pudding dress were awesome. Her dress sounded like quite something though! It made the artist in me want to dig out an old dress and try adding silver charms all around the hem just like hers! :)
Definitely a Christmas favourite!!
Buddy read with Christina. :D