The Bride Wore Pearls
By Liz Carlyle
Publisher: Avon
Release Date: July 31, 2012
Rance Welham, Earl of Lazonby, is attracted to Anisha from their first meeting when he meets her ship as she arrives in England, but his dark history ensures that he restrict his attentions to a light flirtation and friendship. These limits become even more imperative when Ruthveyn and his bride leave London and Lazonby is charged by his friend with the care of Anisha and her sons. Lazonby knows that the last thing Anisha needs is an association with him, a man infamous for his licentiousness and suspected of murder, to weaken her already tenuous claim on acceptance by the ton. She is also a distraction he can ill afford since he is obsessed with untangling his past.
Lazonby’s darkness is not merely a convenient pose. Sentenced twice to die by hanging, he escaped with his life only because of his connections to the mysterious St. James Society. Although innocent of the charges, he knows that his behavior in trying to escape his mystical gift placed him in the circumstances that led to his trials. He blames himself for his mother’s suicide and his father’s premature death, and he is determined to clear his name and his family’s reputation. In the meantime, he resorts to the alcoholic haze of absinthe to escape the memories that plague him. He thinks he has solved the problem of his feelings for Anisha by pairing her with Geoff, Lord Bessett, but when Bessett returns from his assignment having fallen in love with Anais de Rohan (The Bride Wore Scarlet), Lazonby is both relieved and troubled because Anisha is proving irresistible.
In the third book in her Fraternitas Aureae Crucis (Brotherhood of the Golden Cross) series, Carlyle gives her readers another look at the mysterious brotherhood with their equally mysterious gifts. As in the earlier books, the primary characters are complex and flawed. Lazonby’s disastrous choices were fueled by his determination to deny that he had inherited his mother’s gift. His denial led to decadence, danger, and near death. It has brought him to the present moment in his life where he is imprisoned by his hatred and need for revenge and unable to build a meaningful life, regardless of the temptation. He is still reluctant to admit that he is, as his friend Sutherland insists “more than a Guardian”; he is the possessor of the gift albeit in a form different from his mother or his friends.
Did he have it?
He had something. Though he possessed nothing in the way of prescience, he could read some people, some of the time. A rare few spewed emotion like blood from a gaping wound. Others merely seeped or gave up nothing at all.
As a young man, he’d believed that everyone knew this. But they did not. And this difference had made him a damned fine card player—the finest, perhaps, that the hells of London had ever seen. And he was an even better soldier, especially in close combat.
It is only when he comes to understand who he is that Lazonby can accept that he and Anisha are meant to be, that he can be the man she and her sons need.
Identity is also a key theme in the characterization of Anisha. Carlyle uses clothing and jewelry to keep readers aware of Anisha’s mixed blood and the ways it shapes her sense of hybridity as well as the obstacle it presents to her ever being fully accepted into English society. Even her personal wealth and her brother’s title are not enough to overcome the stigma completely. That Anisha herself sees her clothes and jewels as metaphors for her identity makes the images more powerful. Just before the ship docks in England, she removes her nose ring, an act that is both deliberate and symbolic.
She had learned long ago that removing her phul would not remove the Rajputra in her, nor did she wish too.
But she did wish, for the boys ‘sake, to fit in. And she wished, honestly, to ease her own transition into this frigid, water-bound empire. Yet at the same time, Anisha had grown a little weary over the years of having one foot planted here and another there; caught forever in that shifting dance between who she was and who someone else thought she ought to be.
Later, Anisha pairs Indian dress with an English shawl for daily wear, and she wears a sari like a Scottish sash with a ball gown. She may struggle with how to meld the two cultures that identify her, but she accepts the two parts of her being. And the struggle makes her strong. She refuses to be controlled by Ruthveyn’s protectiveness or manipulated by Lucan’s selfishness, and she defies Lazonby when he tries to shut her out and keep her safe and passive.
“I’m not some prize pig at the village fair. You cannot win my desire or deserve it. It either is, or it isn’t. And you must allow me my right to choose which things I do and don’t worry about.”
As much as I appreciate the complexity of Carlyle’s characters, the skill with which she creates sexual tension between Anisha and Lazonby makes this book a standout for me. From the moment they meet, Lazonby and Anisha are physically aware of one another, and every contact heightens that awareness. The building intensity serves to make the love scenes practically singe the pages. Beyond the sizzle, there is also a gradually increasing intimacy between the two, an intimacy that includes sex but is more than two bodies joined in sexual intercourse. These two know each other. They are friends before they are lovers, and the friendship continues to be a vital part of their relationship.
The Bride Wore Pearls is not a perfect book. The suspense element lacks the power of the romance, and repeated references to what seems to be homoeroticism—but isn’t--serve no purpose that I could see. But these are minor irritants when measured against a romance between two characters who both fascinate and appeal and a deftly drawn Victorian world that includes connections in which a faithful Carlyle reader will delight. If you like your romances with sizzle and substance, I recommend The Bride Wore Pearls. Readers who have not read the first two books in the series may miss some nuances, but Anisha and Lazonby’s story can be read as a standalone. I hope Carlyle is not finished with these characters. I want to know if Lucan grows up to be as interesting as his brother and sister.
~Janga
http://justjanga.blogspot.com
I am reading this one right now, can't wait to get into it. My first impression of Lucan is there is going to be some problems. Time will tell.
ReplyDeleteDianna, Lucan definitely is a problem for Anisha in TBWP, but I'd like to see what happens to him when he matures. Carlyle's next book, A Bride by Moonlight (February 2013), is another St. James Society book, but that's all I've been able to find out about it. I hope you're enjoying TBWP.
ReplyDeleteI am loving it so far Janga, she is a little spitfire.
DeleteLove Liz Carlyle's novels as they're always so well written and simply GOOD. I'm very curious to find out what Lucan knows. I love a good mystery combined with a romance novel. In addition, I'm quiet curious as to how Ms. Carlyle combines Anisha's backgrounds of Scottish and Indian. Very unusual!
ReplyDeleteI enjoy Liz Carlyle's writing but I haven't started this series yet. Sounds like I have some good books to look forward to. Thanks, Janga!
ReplyDeleteI've just started hearing some good things about this book - it's definitely got me intrigued.
ReplyDeleteI don't have my copy of this new one by Liz yet. I haven't read the previous books in the series yet either. I usually wait until I have all the books in hand...that is if it doesn't take too long to publish them all and there aren't too many books. Liz seems to only publish one book per year, so it could take a while. I love her writing so she is worth the wait!
ReplyDeleteI wrote something last night. Must have forgotten to to hit post. This story of the difficulty of being part of two cultures and not fitting into either appeals to me. There are other elements in this series that I like too. I look forward to finding out more of how Lady Anisha Stafford adjusts to her new life and how she helps Rance Welham, Earl of Lazonby, find the life he deserves.
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