The Trouble with Honor
By Julia London
Publisher: Harlequin HQN
Release Date: February 25, 2014
Honor Cabot and her three sisters benefited socially and
financially from their widowed mother’s marriage to the wealthy and indulgent Earl
of Beckington. But the earl is near death, her mother is showing alarming signs
of mental illness, and the earl’s heir will soon marry Monica Hargrove, Honor’s
former friend and present enemy. Augustine may be fond of his step-sisters, but
Honor knows that once he is the earl and Monica is his countess, there will be
no room in the Beckington London house or at Longmeadow, the family’s country
estate for a madwoman and her four daughters. As the eldest, Honor feels
compelled to take care of her family. But she needs time, time to find a
husband that she can love and who will also be wealthy enough to provide for
her mother and sisters. In order to gain time, she must stop Augustine’s
wedding, and a recent acquaintance is just the person she needs to help her.
George Easton is the illegitimate son of a maid and a royal
duke. Although the duke never acknowledged George, George’s mother, by means
unknown to George, secured a stipend from his father that provided an
upper-class education for her son, but George remains on the fringes of polite
society, ignored by the sticklers and tolerated within limits by
the more liberal. His own efforts and skill in speculation won him a fortune,
but he has a habit of losing fortunes more easily than he gains them. He also
has a reputation for his way with women and his skill with games of chance.
George bears some scars from his bastard status, but he harbors no illusions
about his social status.
In the ordinary course of events, Honor and George would
never have met, but Honor enjoys flouting society’s rules. One winter evening,
in the company of a few other daring debutantes and young gentlemen, Honor
visits the latest fashionable gaming hell and wins a hundred pounds from
George, to everyone’s amazement but her own. Honor remembers George’s looks,
his fortune, and his reputation for charming the ladies when she hits upon the
idea of Monica’s being seduced away from Augustine. George has no intention of agreeing
to take part in the scheme, but he finds it impossible to resist Honor’s unique
combination of beauty and daring. He also understands her desire to take care
of her mother. Neither Honor nor George is prepared for the spark of attraction
between them to become a conflagration that threatens life as they know it and
promises something of which they have barely dreamed.
I’ve been reading Julia London’s books, historicals and
contemporaries, with pleasure for the past decade, and I was pleased when I
learned that she was introducing a new historical series with The Trouble with Honor. When I read a
London historical romance, I expect a combination of the traditional and the
unconventional. Often the unconventional is a primary character who is less
than likeable but whose clear motivation and intriguing complexities win me over
even when I begin by disliking him/her. The Trouble with Honor has the
unconventional character, but this time the character never fully overcame my
initial reservations.
I did like George. The dissolute hero with an unfair share
of charm and his own sense of honor is a familiar type to romance readers, but
London gives George the dimensions to make him a strikingly individual
character. He won my heart, as I want the hero to do. Readers who like their romances with abundant
sizzle will be delighted with the passion between George and Honor. But Honor
inspired mixed reactions in me. On the one hand, her plight effectively
demonstrates the limited options open to women, and I fully sympathize with her
frustration over those limitations. But at times she came across as just silly
and shallow. Frankly, in the battle with Monica, my sympathies were often with
Monica. Because London allows her reader access to Monica’s point of view, it
is difficult to ever see her as the manipulative bitch she is in Honor’s
estimation.
I also never understood why the earl’s death leaves Honor
and her family in such straits. He is a man of great wealth. I’m no expert on
nineteenth-century British history, but I thought the widow was provided for
according to law and that the provision usually included a dower house. It also
seemed logical to me that so loving and indulgent a parent as the earl would
have provided for his stepdaughters. Also, one of the key scenes that some readers
may find romantic just made me cringe. (I’m being vague to avoid spoilers.)
Final analysis: The
Trouble with Honor is an interesting book, one that I found difficult to
put down once I began it. I love George, and the relationship among the four
sisters was realistic and endearing. The concerns about their mother’s
disintegration added particular poignancy in an era when mental illness was
feared and treatment was inhumane. However, the trouble I had with Honor and
her situation was not resolved by the HEA, and this book will not be one of my
favorite Julia London titles. Nevertheless, I am captivated enough to return
for The Fall of Grace, Book 2 in the
series set for release on July 29, 2014.
~Janga
http://justjanga.blogspot.com
~Janga
http://justjanga.blogspot.com
I am so looking forward to reading this! Your review was great, Janga. I agree that one would think that a widow of a wealthy man would always be cared for but I read in other books that that is not necessarily the case. Makes me want to research it more.
ReplyDeleteI would be interesting to know more about that, Connie. I'm looking forward to reading this one as well.
ReplyDeleteIT would be interesting. I doubt knowing more about that would me me more interesting. lol
DeleteMy very first Julia London's book I ever read was, "A Courtesan Scandal", and I love it so, and been in love w/ JL's books ever since. Can't wait to read this new series. :)
ReplyDeleteI've been hearing a lot about this book and I do think it's something i would enjoy. I've actually not read her yet.
ReplyDeleteEven though historical romances are a favorite, I have not read any of Julia London's. There are a few in my TBR stash that I haven't been able to get to yet. I have read her Cedar Springs contemporary romances and enjoyed them. I like her slightly different situations and character development.
ReplyDeleteThanks for another honest and insightful review.