I always think it’s really interesting when an author sets up a character with a major flaw. I should clarify that by saying that I don’t consider flawed rakes to be very interesting. Frankly, there were apparently so many rakes in London that Home Depot would have sold them off for a dollar each (ha). Tessa Dare is a fairly new author, but she does something daring in A Lady of Persuasion: she sets up her heroine as a less-than-perfect sort of woman. In fact, Isabel Grayson is pretty close to being an uptight, overly pious, overly charitable twit. Except…she isn’t. She’s trying to be all those things, and telling herself that every time she does something naughty with Sir Tobias Aldridge (her own personal rake whom she marries quick as a wink), she’d better do something charitable to make up.
This makes for a rather bewildering marriage, at least from Tobias’s point-of-view. As soon as he and Isabel make love – and wow, do they have a great intimate life – she leaps out of bed and starts writing letters about climbing boys and slavery. In short: she’s not so good at cuddling. Plus, she’s got him running for a seat in Parliament, though he considers himself among the laziest of men.
What Tessa Dare does with this unlikely pair is pure genius: she spins their story around the fear that we all harbor in some corner of our soul that we’re not lovable. Isabel feels that she must, she simply must be a positive angel of goodness, to make up for her inadequacies. Tobias feels that she couldn’t possibly love him, once she realizes that he’s going to fail at the whole parliamentary thing.
The part that made me heave a huge sigh was the very end, when he tells her exactly what his ambitions are: “I mean to love you so well, so fiercely. To make certain you never doubt what a remarkable, beautiful woman you are. To make certain the world knows it too. To create a stable, loving home for you and our family. To give you a place where you will always feel safe.”
Sigh.










2 Comments
that is a sighable line!
Thanks for the recommendation. I bought a Tessa Dare book on your recommendation … just not this book! I couldn’t remember which one it was when I was in the story.
I highly recommend One Dance With a Duke. It’s one of the only romance novels I’ve read twice … because I wanted to. She’s really good.
She’s good with not making the flaws ridiculous or melodramatic. Sigh!