MY
LAST DUCHESS
BY
DAISY GOODWIN
THE
BLURB:-
Cora
Cash, possibly the wealthiest heiress in 1890s America, has been
raised to believe that money will open every door to her.
But
when her mother whisks her to England to secure her an aristocratic
match, Cora is dismayed by the welcome she at first receives. The
great houses in which she is entertained are frosty and forbidding,
dogged with intrigue above stairs, and gossip below. And it is only
when she loses her heart- to a man she barely knows- that Cora realises the game she is playing is one she does not fully
understand, and that her own happiness could be the prize.
THE
REALITY:-
Okay,
I know I said I wouldn't be doing as much reading or reviewing, but
I'm not in a position to be a full time writer yet (although
that day will come) and need something to read on the bus/ train to
work!
Fans
of Downton Abbey will love this one. In fact, if the book hadn't
been published in 2010- the same time as Downton's first appearance
on our screens- I would say that it was inspired by it (even our
heroine is called Cora!) Set in 1893, it flits between Rhode Island,
London and a beautiful country estate in Dorset.
This
is a great upstairs/ downstairs comparison between the upper and
lower classes and also highlights the differences between American
(new money) etiquette and English (old money) ways. We also get to
see how a mixed race relationship would be treated in the nineteenth
century- badly in the USA, where slavery was, no doubt, fresh
in people's minds, and with a bit less prejudice in England.
It's
great to see our heroine marry for love, after she and her duke meet
in a quite romantic way, and interesting to note that, despite
holding a warm place in his heart, she cannot control him. Women did
not rule the roost in that day and age. The sheer ridiculousness of
some of society's expectations, and also some of the characters made
me laugh out loud- especially Cora's mother and her mother-in-law,
the “Double Duchess”.
There
is a good “secret” thread running throughout the storyline, but
my one criticism would be that the strange and possibly kinky
relationship between Charlotte and her odious husband was not
explored enough. Now that would have been really
interesting...
Nothing to set the literary world alight, but a good read, nonetheless.
Nothing to set the literary world alight, but a good read, nonetheless.
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