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There are some stories I I've where she gets to stay the ugly duckling. Maggie osbournes silver lining and the first of Anne Gracie's perfect series come to mind...
There are a number of books also where if you read carefully all the comments about her beauty later in the book are in his voice or POV. That can be a lovely subtle way of showing how he has fallen in love...
There are a number of books also where if you read carefully all the comments about her beauty later in the book are in his voice or POV. That can be a lovely subtle way of showing how he has fallen in love...
Elizabeth Hoyt's TO SEDUCE A SINNER has an ugly suckling heroine who doesn't get a makeover. It's one of my favorites of hers.

Good example, Manda! Elizabeth Hoyt has the first chapter to that one on her website. Melisande has her hair done, and is wearing a clean dress that fits when she meets her Viscount. Her only real problem is a "meager bosom", which he learns is not any impediment to love.


I'll have to check that one out. Thank you! I've read some of her books but i dont think i read that one
Mrs.ColinBridgerton wrote: "Manda wrote: "Elizabeth Hoyt's TO SEDUCE A SINNER"
I'll have to check that one out. Thank you! I've read s..."
Jasper is my favorite sort of hero. Funny, charming, but with a depth that's belied by his easy manners.
You would also like Anne Gracie's THE PERFECT RAKE. Everyone else thinks the heroine is plain compared to her younger sister, but the hero thinks they're all nuts because he thinks she's beautiful.
I'll have to check that one out. Thank you! I've read s..."
Jasper is my favorite sort of hero. Funny, charming, but with a depth that's belied by his easy manners.
You would also like Anne Gracie's THE PERFECT RAKE. Everyone else thinks the heroine is plain compared to her younger sister, but the hero thinks they're all nuts because he thinks she's beautiful.

Yep, that's the one. His pallet on the floor wrecks me.
One thing I'll say about THE PERFECT RAKE is that it does NOT read like the prologue. That's a book where I think the prologue does a disservice to the rest of the book. My first attempt I DNFd it. But I was sick in bed with a cold and picked it up again and fell in love.
One thing I'll say about THE PERFECT RAKE is that it does NOT read like the prologue. That's a book where I think the prologue does a disservice to the rest of the book. My first attempt I DNFd it. But I was sick in bed with a cold and picked it up again and fell in love.
I totally agree with you, Mrs. Colin :) and now I'm gonna have to read Manda's recommend- Elizabeth Hoyt's TO SEDUCE A SINNER.

You know what I find most interesting is that I can think of a list of historical romances--both European and American--with plain heroines who are essentially unchanged when the heroes fall in love with them. In addition to the Gracie, Osborne, and Hoyt already mentioned, all of which I love, there's Mary Balogh's First Comes Marriage, Teresa Medeiros's Heather and Velvet,Susan Wiggs's The Charm School, Pam Morsi's Courting Miss Hattie, Deborah Simmons's The Devil Earl . . .; but I can't think of a single contemporary. Oh, and why are there so many plain heroines named Prudence? There are three on my list--the Gracie, the Medeiros, and the Simmons.
And, avoiding spoilers, I must say I loved EJ's The Ugly Duchess, and one of the things I liked best was the nature of her makeover.
And, avoiding spoilers, I must say I loved EJ's The Ugly Duchess, and one of the things I liked best was the nature of her makeover.

Mrs.ColinBridgerton, since I love the intelligence, the complex characterization, the wit, the warmth, and the fun of Eloisa's writing, I'm not sure how much my recommendation will be worth to you. All I can say is I found The Ugly Duchess a wonderful read. And while there is a makeover, it is not a conventional one. It's perfect for the character, it's smart, and it is not linked to the hero's love for her. I really don't want to say more for fear of spoilers.

Thanks again ladies!

The hero, usually a rakish sort, can't understand why he is drawn to her, and only he can see her beauty. The transformation comes from his perspective, not from the way she dresses. The only one I can think of where the heroine transforms herself is Mistress, but she really wants to go back to the way she is, without all the trappings of Society.
I think I'll give that another listen... :)

So reading stories about the "ugly duckling" are right up my alley, problem is, the ones I like are really hard to come by.
So here is my questions, why do authors feel the necessity to transform the "ugly duckling" into a swan? Couldn't the fact that she is smart, or self sufficient, or a survivor be enough? Do we have to transform her into a beautiful swan? And don't get me wrong, I don't have anything against beautiful heroines, but seems to me the hero falls in love with her AFTER her transformation. Thats a bit shallow, isn't it?
So what are your thoughts? Am I alone? lol