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Clare Darcy is hailed as "the new Georgette Heyer," and her novels of life in Regency England are called "lively, romantic, enchanting" and "fun." In this trilogy, three of her most memorable stories are again available—in one convenient volume.
Lady Pamela is the story of an impulsive, high-spirited girl who sets out to restore the Family Honour by locating a memorandum from the Foreign Office that was entrusted to her grandfather and suddenly missing from his files. Instead, Lady Pamela Frayne finds a dashing adversary in the person of the high-handed Lord Dalven, an ardent Spanish Marquis, a villainous foreign agent and more intrigues, both romantic and political, than she had bargained for.
In Victoire, a clever plot to extract money from the Marquis of Tarn is foiled by spunky Victoire Duvemay. In the process, her good name is compromised, and, as a gentleman. Tarn feels it his duty to marry her. But no courtship that takes place during the height of the London Season can run smoothly, and Victoire's is beset by a rival for Tarn's love, an engaging officer from her own past, and an envious cousin who plots to inherit Tarn's title.
Allegra concerns the plight of lovely Allegra Herrington, left penniless and homeless by the death of her father. She is at first determined to accept the offer of marriage from her distant cousin, Sir Derek, who has inherited her father's estate and title. But when she hears rumors that he has proposed out of charity, Allegra refuses him and sweeps off to Brussels with her sister to earn her living as a schoolmistress. However, the battle of Waterloo and the persistent Sir Derek complicate her plans for independence.
All three novels are written in Miss Darcy's usual delightful style and are full of the plot twistings, period background details, and lively aristocratic characters that people her stories.
Prior summary (actually a review):
"Regency romance trilogy. Lady Pamela has some good humorous dialogue, in a Wodehouse style, but all 3 books (Victoire: 2 stars, Allegra: 1 star) have tiresome heroines who are foolishly rash, weak-minded, prone to acting on gossip and generally act without considering any hard facts. References to Waterloo in Allegra redeem the narrative somewhat."
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Feedback?August 3, 2020 | Edited by VioletFrost | added new summary (leaving prior summary intact as well) |
April 11, 2020 | Edited by cestode5686 | Edited without comment. |
February 13, 2020 | Edited by MARC Bot | remove fake subjects |
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May 5, 2010 | Created by WorkBot | new work for accessible book |