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[personal profile] larryhammer
My rereading of the past couple weeks, which provoked the Tough Guide post. In career order:
  • ETA2: Devil's Cub (1932) - A rake, flying England after a duel, in his haste abducts the wrong sister; adventures ensue. Set c. 1770.
  • ETA3: Regency Buck (1935) - An heiress and her brother are wards of a batchelor; tedious, lifeless fortune-hunting ensues, wrapped around an unconvincing murder plot. The best parts are Beau Brummel and, well, nothing else.
  • The Talisman Ring (1936) - Possibly one of her silliest plots, which is saying something; one of Heyer's few books in which a murderer in the family is brought to justice, instead of the scandal being hushed up; set mid-1790s.
  • Faro's Daughter (1941) - Nearly as silly, and rather less interesting; also set in the 1790s. Am selling this one off.
  • The Reluctant Widow (1946) - One of Heyer's least interesting heroines--actually scatterbrained, for all that's she's one of Heyer's young, gently-born governesses.
  • The Foundling (1948) - A nobleman attempting to come of age meets a stunningly beautiful idiot; hi-jinx ensue. Fun one, though there's practically no romance.
  • Arabella (1949) - A vicar's daughter is taken for an heiress by the haut ton; hi-jinx ensue.
  • The Grand Sophy (1950) - Another young woman used to having her way in a motherless household finds the strong man she needs; the climax is one of Heyer's best extended comic set-pieces. The gross antisemitism is gratuitous, and could have been removed with three word changes.
  • The Quiet Gentleman (1951) - Attempted murder is hushed over to avoid scandal; worse, the pseudo-Byronic young puppy is tiresome here. Meh.
  • The Toll Gate (1954) - Another scandal-worse-than-injustice book, made palatable by being quite fun, when we're above-ground.
  • Sylvester: or, The Wicked Uncle (1957) - A terminally shy girl, after making a poor showing her first Season, writes a roman a clef; hi-jinx ensue. Fun and humanwise both.
  • Venetia (1958) - Highspirited yet innocent virgin meets a rake. Rather sweet, actually, in a believable way.
  • The Unknown Ajax (1959) - Marries Heyer's two country locations, Yorkshire and Sussex, in a single plot, using a hero with a deplorable sense of humor; the hushed-up scandal is, for once, not murder. Quite possibly my favorite.
  • The Nonesuch (1962) - A young, gently-born governess is put in charge of a stunningly beautiful egotist; hi-jinx ensue. (description corrected)
  • False Colours (1963) - When a young lord goes missing just before being introduced to his in-laws-to-be, his twin takes his place; hi-jinx ensue.
  • Frederica (1965) - An older sister gets a distant relative to help find a brilliant match for her beautiful (if silly) younger sister; hi-jinx ensue, including an inadvertant hot-air baloon ride. (description corrected)
  • Charity Girl (1970) - A scrapegrace nobleman runs into an orphan running away from her aunt's house; hi-jinx don't ensue, mostly because in this late novel Heyer no longer sparkles. The plot retreads much of The Foundling, with a romance that's even more perfunctory.
ETA: Books not noted are all Regency, usually set 1815-1818.

Of course, after so much light and bright and sparkling, this journal want some shade -- it wants a post of solemn specious nonsense about writing epic poetry.

---L.

Date: 7 February 2005 06:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pnh.livejournal.com
Oddly enough, after several unsuccessful attempts at Heyer, I'm currently immersed in The Grand Sophy, and enjoying it immoderately. (Teresa warned me of its notably flaw, which you note as well.)

Date: 7 February 2005 07:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jorrie-spencer.livejournal.com
I must still try Arabella, Sylvester, and False Colours. I think The Unknown Ajax had one of the funniest sections in that last third, although my first Heyer, The Convenient Marriage, also had me laughing out loud, despite its weaknesses.

Date: 7 February 2005 07:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] verdandiweaves.livejournal.com
I remember enjoying Devil's Cub and the prequel (whose name escapes me). I had a fondness for Leonie - however, I was very young at the time and haven't read them for some time. :)

Date: 7 February 2005 09:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] verdandiweaves.livejournal.com
Ah, yes I liked These old Shades a lot. I didn't realize Regency Buck was their grandchildren - I must go back and look - or perhaps that's one I haven't read. Is Leonie still alive? There wouldn't be much point reading it otherwise. And yes, she was wasted in the Georgian era. :)

A small correction

Date: 8 February 2005 03:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] athenais.livejournal.com
The chronological trio is These Old Shades, Devil's Cub and An Infamous Army. None of those characters appear in Regency Buck but the characters from Regency Buck appear in An Infamous Army.

Date: 8 February 2005 07:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] galeni.livejournal.com
Masqueraders is another of my favorite Heyers. It involves the Jacobites and the "Man Mountain" of a hero. It still leaves me wondering if the plot works or if I was bamboozled like the characters.

Thanks to you I've been rereading Heyers during my holiday this week. When I ran out, I moved to reread Jo Beverly novels, which have much more realism so they are sort of a cross between a Heyer and a Violet Winspear (Harlequins - old style). Some are better than others, of course, but her Rogues series can be fun.

Date: 8 February 2005 03:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] athenais.livejournal.com
Johnny is the only one with dialogue, I think, but yes. It's fun to see the various characters from other novels turning up in this one.

I add that I find everyone in Regency Buck entirely predictable and dull until they show up in An Infamous Army, except the Earl of Worth who is almost completely two-dimensional. He's a Classic Heyer Hero I, the brooding Bronte type, who she never manages to animate.

I also add that I am inordinately fond of the Avon family.

Happy Year of the Rooster, Larry!

Date: 8 February 2005 03:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mcdolemite.livejournal.com
Image

Kung hey fat choi.

It's been a great long while...

Date: 8 February 2005 04:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shelly-rae.livejournal.com
since I read any Heyer. And a scan of the shelves shows a decided lack--must have read library copies in the past. I bet the used bookstore in town has some. Would you recommend, say two, that are standouts worth looking for?
Anon.

Date: 12 February 2005 05:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com
I think you mixed up Frederica with The Nonesuch, in your plot descriptors.

Frederica (one of the best, imo) is about Frederica bringing her gorgeous sister to town to find her a suitable spouse--and her younger brothers as well, calling on Hero Mark I as their "guardian", much hi-jinx ensuing, esp. with the brothers.

Date: 12 February 2005 05:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com
I find Masqueradors still eminently readable!

Date: 12 February 2005 05:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com
I don't see Friday's Child here, btw...one of the better ones.

That, in fact, sparked the single fan letter that Heyer treasured, acto Hodge's bio--the letter from the political prisoner who, cooped up in a cell with other women for some years, kept their sanity and passed the time by telling and retelling Friday's Child over and over.

Date: 12 February 2005 06:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com
Well, the only one who's young is the heroine--seventeen--but the hero is in his twenties, he's the Heyer hero I prefer (with lots of funny bits) and his friends are delights, Ferdy calling Wodehouse to mind.

Date: 12 February 2005 06:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com
PS, unexpected reminders of Katherine keep showing up here, too, and still that knife to the heart, sigh.

Date: 14 February 2005 10:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] galeni.livejournal.com
It just joined my Read Next pile which surrounds my bed. Being single has some advantages!

Masqueraders

Date: 15 February 2005 12:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tnh.livejournal.com
Oh, The Masqueraders is charming. Once you ascertain that you have a fantastickall stage-manager type who claims to be the greatest swordsman in Europe, an obvious villain, a cross-dressing brother and sister who are carrying on romances with two members of another family, and an utterly dependable manservant, it's clear that there will presently be a missing heir to a title, mistaken identities, masked balls, powdered wigs, satin, brocade, lace, patches, sword canes, coaches, highwaymen, duels involving both rapiers and snappy dialogue, and a great many plot twists that happen at the best or worst possible moment.

What has plausibility to do with it?

Re: Masqueraders

Date: 15 February 2005 01:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com
Yes! Despite its Jacobean setting, I consider Masqueraders as the last splendid Ruritanian.

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