Posts Tagged Meredith Duran

Dancing in Romance Novels

Jessica’s note: While reading Meredith Duran’s Written on Your Skin recently, I was struck by how lovely and important a brief bit of dancing in the country was to the couple’s developing relationship. I thought right away about another book, Julie Ann Long’s To Love a Thief, in which the hero teaches the heroine how to dance as part of a general education in how to be a lady, and gets schooled himself. I thought it might be nice to do a post on dancing in romance, and to ask readers to share their favorite dance scenes.  Janet offered to take the lead. Thanks, Janet!

Doing without Dancing

By Janet Webb, aka @JanetNorCal

It may be possible to do without dancing entirely. Instances have been known of young people passing many, many months successively, without being at any ball of any description, and no material injury accrue to any body or mind;—but when a beginning is made—when the felicities of rapid motion have once been, though slightly, felt—it must be a very heavy set that does not ask for more.
—Jane Austen, Emma

Dancing, in historicals that are accurate (mostly) for the Regency era, can be a time out of time. When else could a man and a woman speak together without the presence of a chaperone or a group of friends? I am speaking in particular about the waltz, although other dances certainly allowed for conversation as well. And more than conversation: sometimes the repartee and just the sensation of closeness seem like a first sexual encounter. Intensely moving and sometimes setting the tone for a relationship.

In Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen: Darcy is invited by his friend Mr. Bingley to dance with Elizabeth Bennett. He declines and his reasons, rather snobbish and patronizing, are overheard by Elizabeth. Her pride is hurt and she is prejudiced against him. They do eventually dance though, and different feelings and emotions are felt by them both. This is the essence of a meaningful “minuet” LoL: feelings change, sometimes, through physical proximity.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dBgaO9Va5cA

Of course, “Our” notion of dancing in historical romances almost entirely focuses on the waltz and the truth is, dancing was more like Scottish country dancing today — dances done in groups. This is why, for example, in Georgette Heyers’s Friday’s Child, there is a scene at Almacks when George, Lord Wortham tries, yet again, to convince Isabella Milbourne of his undying love for her, but  is constantly interrupted by the movements of the country dance — and their increasingly heated and uncomfortable interchange amused everyone watching. Dancing was not a deux, or at least not often, in Regency times.

Or consider Sylvester by Georgette Heyer: Sylvester arranges for Phoebe to come to London after he rescues her from a carriage accident. She is on the road in the first place because she is running away from a marriage proposal from him, a duke! He is quite insulted when he learns she would rather become a writer, living with her former governess, than marry him (not that he wants to marry her!). He’s a duke and very prideful and he’s both intrigued and insulted by her behaviour. Wait, there’s more. Phoebe wrote an extremely clever roman a clef based on her horrific London season the year before: Sylvester is the erstwhile villain. It is published soon after she returns to London and although it is fiction, it is hauntingly accurate. Sylvester is furious. As one might expect, the rumours of authorship start to fly and Sylvester insists that Phoebe waltz with him: ostensibly to quell the rumours but he rips into her and she flees the dance floor. One doesn’t have to be a scholar of Freud to understand the sub-text: both of them have feelings for each other that are by no means entirely negative.

Occasionally the dance floor can be the first place where a couple interact with equal footing, like in An Unwilling Bride by Jo Beverley. Lucien is a marquess, a dangerous and glittery blond. Beth, his fiancée, a former school teacher, is quite terrified of the feelings he evokes in her and the power he holds in the relationship. Their first dance is at their engagement ball and it’s a courtly minuet a deux. Here’s a passage:

They turned to face each other. She watched him carefully. When, as she expected, he performed an elaborately deep full bow, she sank into as deep a court curtsey as her skirt would allow, her eyes correctly on his at all times.  Then she rose slowly with smooth control. She did not place her hand in his outstretched one until the last moment to make it clear to all that she needed no assistance in rising.

This was somewhat of a turning point for them. In a pleasing reflection of that pivotal moment, they dance the same dance at their wedding.

Sometimes a dance allows a gentleman – or more likely a rake – to cut through convention. This happens in A Summer to Remember by Mary Balogh. Kit has bet his friends that he can convince the most Ice Princess-like lady of the ton to marry him. Of course, he has not even met her when he agrees on this wager and when he arrives at a ball that Lauren is also attending, he knows he’ll never be able to get past the phalanx of her over-protective family. A friendly matron presents Kit to Lauren as an acceptable partner (remember, there always has to be an introduction if a couple has not previously met) and Lauren agrees to waltz with him. That act of deliberate stepping outside her role on Lauren’s part starts the chain of events moving. And of course Kit speaks to her in an unusually double-entendredrish way.

In Balogh’s Slightly Dangerous, Christine has formed a very poor impression of Wulfric, the duke of Bedwyn. She has been in attendance at a house party with him – and others – for a week or so. At the closing ball she changes her opinion of him. Wulfric asks a homely, overlooked gentlewoman to dance, and Christine is forced to admit to herself that nothing but sheer gentility and grace on Wulfric’s part could have been the impetus. Christine and Wulf also have one of Balogh’s trademark natural surroundings sexual coming-togethers  … because their dance was interrupted when a clumsy oaf landed heavily on Christine’s foot, they continued their waltz outside in the garden and, as they say, one thing led to another.

Concluding with another Balogh, A Christmas Bride, one sees how a dance can restore – or at a minimum, paper-over – a damaged reputation. Pris, the former mistress of Precious Jewel, is now married to Gerald, but their married life is lonely because they removed from the ton because of her former profession. Edgar, the hero of A Christmas Bride, sets a scheme in motion whereby Gerald and Pris join him and his family and an assortment of aristocrats, including the very haughty and reserved Duke of Bridgewater, for the Christmas season. When the duke asks Priscilla to dance with him at the Christmas Day ball the reader knows that from then on, Priscilla and Gerald will be able to rejoin their peers in English society. It is an intensely satisfying moment.

Thank you, Janet!

Like Janet, all of my examples are from historicals. Which makes me wonder: can dancing be significant in a contemporary romance, given we know the couple can just go get naked if they choose? Are couples in paranormal too busy fighting the bad guys to dance?

What do you think are some of the most memorable dance scenes in romance?

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Review: Written on Your Skin, by Meredith Duran

I was looking forward to Written on Your Skin, Meredith Duran’s third novel, after having read and enjoyed her first two. This one didn’t work as well for me, unfortunately. I hasten to add that my view is an outlier: most reviews of WOYS have been very very positive. This will be a brief post.

Blurb:

Beauty, charm, wealthy admirers: Mina Masters enjoys every luxury but freedom. To save herself from an unwanted marriage, she turns her wiles on a darkly handsome stranger. But Mina’s wouldbe hero is playing his own deceptive game. A British spy, Phin Granville has no interest in emotional entanglements…until the night Mina saves his life by gambling her own.

Four years later, Phin inherits a title that frees him from the bloody game of espionage. But memories of the woman who saved him won’t let Phin go. When he learns that Mina needs his aid, honor forces him back into the world of his nightmares.

Deception has ruled Mina’s life just as it has Phin’s. But as the beauty and the spy match wits in a dangerous dance, their practiced masks begin to slip, revealing a perilous attraction. And the greatest threat they face may not be traitors or murderous conspiracies, but their own dark desires….

I found reading this book to be a very strange experience. It’s hard to explain, but it felt very “jerky” to me. I kept thinking the Kindle formatting was wrong, that paragraphs or pages were missing. It did not flow smoothly for me at all. I would read lines like “he had routed her”, and I would think, “huh, what?”, and have to go back and see how exactly this had happened.

Much of the book takes places in Phin and Mina’s heads. They both have haunting pasts — him as an unwilling spy for the British government and her as complicit in her some way in her mother’s abusive marriage. He starts off the book as a classic self-loathing tortured hero (“every inch of his skin prickled with self-contempt” etc.), with an opium habit (although this dour identity, including the opium and panic attacks, pretty much evaporates without explanation), and she … well, she was never easy for me to pin down. A brash American business woman? A scared mamma’s girl? Or, as Phin sees her for much of the book, a doll or a child? (Frequent references to Mina as a wriggling child, a doll, a brat, whose cheeks he wanted to pinch, etc. made me uncomfortable)

Phin and Mina don’t trust each other. Their relationship is gamesmanship, with sexual overtones, at first. And when they figure out they are on the same side, they have to deal with those ghosts of their pasts before they can develop a relationship. I didn’t feel I had a good handle on either of them, or when I did, the characters sort of changed in unexpected ways, preventing my investment.

Everything — I mean, the slightest movement of a head or finger — was written as deeply significant. But when you don’t feel that invested as a reader, this doesn’t have the intended effect. There’s just this constant thick cloud of figuration and emoting that I found very distancing for me as a reader.

There were two things I liked about it.

One, there’s a scene when Phin and Mina are in the country and they dance. It was a really beautifully written few pages, and the only place in the book where I felt drawn, as a reader, to this as a love story. It’s inspired me to write a post on dancing in romance novels, whenever I get around to it.

Second, when Phin is talking about someone (a bad guy) he accidentally killed, he recognizes, “but someone had wept for him, no doubt. Someone always did.” Mina has a similar recognition late in the book. I like the ambiguity of viewpoint. From some point of view, everyone is good and everyone is tainted.

I picked this one up and put it down so many times over the past months. I am sure that contributed negatively to my perception of the flow of the narrative. I’m sorry I don’t have more to offer for this review. Definitely follow the links above for more enlightened discourse about this novel.

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Joint Review: Bound By Your Touch, by Meredith Duran

Bound By Your Touch

Tumperkin’s Take

I read Meredith Duran’s debut, Duke of Shadows last year and could tell that Duran was going to be an author I’d enjoy.  I meant to review it but it was one of those books that I miss the boat on (about 70% of what I read I never review despite the best of intentions.  I tend to find that if I don’t review something within about a month of reading it, it doesn’t get reviewed.  How the likes of Jane from Dear Author can review practically every book they read, I just don’t know).

Anyway, when Jessica suggested we jointly review BBYT, I was happy to agree.  And it did not disappoint.  It’s a better book than Duke of Shadows, a more accomplished and confident book altogether, with a stronger structure and a defter touch.

The hero is James Durham, Viscount Sanburne, heir to the Earl of Moreland.  The heroine is Lydia Boyce, the oldest daughter of an Egyptian scholar and a scholar herself, a graduate of Girton College, Cambridge.  This circumstance, along with a plethora of other details, place the book in a richly-observed late Victorian period.

This is a setting I like.  My favourite historical settings are Regency and Georgian but this later Victorian period is also one that resonates with me.  It’s a society on the brink of true modernity with fast, efficient railways and mechanised industry.  The modern world with its looming changes: universal suffrage, the women’s movement etc. is within glimpsing distance.  Within a few decades, the privileged world of the aristocracy supported by its vast pool of underpaid servants, will begin to wither.

The main part of the book opens with James interrupting a lecture Lydia is giving in her father’s stead.  He is oblivious to Lydia and set upon creating a scene with his father.  We come to learn that James nurses a deep anger with his father and that he has made it his mission in life to goad and embarrass him.  As the book wears on, we learn the reason for the anger but at this early stage, we are allowed to judge James as Lydia does, as a spoiled, excessive wastrel.  James has purchased what he believes to be a piece of genuine Egyptian antiquity, a stela, that his father will covet.  But Lydia – irate at James’ interruption – publicly (and correctly) pronounces it to be a fake, thus setting off a chain of events that will bring her own beloved father’s reputation into question and indeed her very life into danger.

James’ raison d’etre is the animosity he feels towards his father.  By contrast Lydia treasures her role as her father’s right hand, idealising both him and his achievements.  Despite her own academic interests lying elsewhere, she devotes herself to being her father’s assistant.  Duran neatly contrasts how James and Lydia’s views of their respective fathers develops, and explores the idea of faith – Lydia’s unerring faith in her father, James’ complete lack of faith in his and then, ultimately, the faith they place in one another – to great effect.

Despite a few reservations which I mention later, I very much liked the character of James.  But then he is that archetypal romance rogue that I am a sucker for: he is beautiful and damaged; he is a self-loathing wastrel bent on destruction.  How many times have I written such a description of a hero?  Why is it so endlessly appealing?  Maybe it’s the healer complex that so many female romance readers have.

Lydia, by contrast, I struggled with a little.  She too is a ‘type’ that romance readers will be familiar with.  She is the brave/ forthright/ capable type yet vulnerable inside.  She is the academic heroine with a prickly skin and a passionate soul.  Do I find her harder to like because she is a heroine and I just give heroes an easier ride?  (I do find myself falling in love with heroes regularly but heroines only rarely).  Or is it because we demand our heroines to be less archetypal and more real than heroes?  I’m not sure.  But heroines will always find it harder to win me over.

Duran uses these very familiar types but she breathes life into them too.  Lydia, for example, shows herself in a quite unflattering light on a few occasions in her ongoing bickering with her middle sister.  I enjoyed that untypical facet of her character.  Duran managed to make it both unattractive and understandable.  The other thing that was good about Lydia was how she ‘read’ her encounters with Sanburne.  She will think he likes her, then worry that her instinct is wrong and that he is merely playing her.  These vacillating worries of Lydia’s felt authentic and won my sympathy.

I did have a few reservations about BBYT.  Neither the underlying reason for James’ anger nor how he expressed it against his father completely convinced me.  Similarly, the ease with which that issue was resolved disappointed me.  It made the whole thing feel manufactured and convenient.  I also rather wished that Lydia’s own scholarly endeavours had been made more of.  At one point, she objects to being referred to as a bluestocking – the implication being that she is self-educated – when she is a graduate of Girton.  I would liked to have seen this ‘professionalism’ demonstrated.  We got a little taste of it at the outset of the book when she denounces the stela as a fake and I would have loved a little more of that.

But really, these are quibbles.  BBYT is a quality read and I enjoyed it greatly.  I have great hopes for the next book featuring Phin and Mina.  We met Mina briefly in this book and she is very much more to my taste as a heroine.

In fact, I think I might just be able to fall in love with her.

Jessica’s Rejoinder

Isn’t Tumperkin smart? Love that review, and agree with pretty much all of it. So I’ll try to add a few different observations.

Like T, I had read Duke of Shadows last year and really enjoyed it. And I also think this is a better book. It’s very well written — beautifully, soaringly written in many places — and James and Lydia are intelligent, sympathetically flawed, and very interesting characters.

I admit I was reluctant to start this book. Yet another rake/spinster story?  But as soon as I read the first page, I was hooked. We begin with an incredibly gripping and heartbreaking scene in which Lydia comes to realize that the man she thought she’d marry wants another woman.

Duran does something in this book that very few authors of rake romances manage to do: she conveyed what the partying life was like among the rakish nobility. I have a secret fondness for the film Marie Antoinette. It fails on many levels, but it succeeds in three ways: the soundtrack, the cinematography, and finally, the way Sophia Coppola manages to convey the totally alluring, drifting quality of the privileged party set on the verge of dislocating downfall, giving you the feel that you are there, and, despite the dangers, want to be.

In BBYT, I thought the early scene when James emerges from drug induced fog at his own party captured it beautifully, and a later scene at the races also completely conveyed the odd mix of boredom and excitement, easy privilege and self-conscious unease, breaking and relying on social conventions at once, and friendships forged in a shared ironic attitude to nobility that are somehow both totally casual and very deeply felt.

Tumperkin mentions the feel of the threat of oncoming societal changes. I think this was a very important theme in the book. Here’s James thinking about his long friendship with Phin:

“Eggheaded dolts spoiled into uselessness: thus, at the tender age of ten, had [Phin] dismissed the majority of Britain’s future leaders. Eyeing James, he’d added Really, I have no idea how you turned out so interesting. I do hope you manage to keep it up.

James had tried. For years afterward, whenever he found himself in a situation where his position gave him advantages, he tested himself with Phin’s rule: Is this interesting? — which soon came to mean, Is this original? It turned out, far too often, that the answer was No.

Lydia, too, has an emerging class consciousness — “He behaved very stupidly, and people adored him for it. Ah the wonders of a title!” she thinks of James — but, like James, her attitude towards privilege is informed not only by social consciousness but by her personal history, her experience of being an educated, strong, competent woman in a world where that makes her even more dependent and vulnerable than an ignorant, weak, but married one.

I wanted to point this out because I think, like their attitudes towards their fathers, this is another example of a kind of mirroring in the book, that worked very well to both say something interesting about the times and provide internal and external conflict between James and Lydia.

Like T says, there were a lot of hallmarks of the era, not just in the technology or clothing, but the emerging mass media, new awareness of sexuality — James’ every move is reported on by the press, Lydia thinks to herself that the male powers that be want her body to remain a stranger to her, for example.

I found the sensual scenes especially well done (and we all know how easy it is to go wrong here). Like this one:

The fit of their bodies startled her. It felt like an answer to some question she yet hadn’t thought to ask.

Or this one:

He praised her for doing exactly what she should not do, and the fit of his body against hers was causing something within her to unfold, to grow stronger and clearer as it developed. Like an anagram unriddling itself, or a maze slowly straightening.

You know how the heroes are always so much taller than heroines? And the only way you know this is the constant references to something hard prodding the heroine’s belly? I am happy to report that Duran actually uses the height difference beautifully in a scene where Lydia finds herself level with James’ throat and cannot stop herself from opening her mouth on his skin.  (although it must be said, given my last post, that Duran is a smell offender, when she has Lydia think James once smelled “civilized and predictable”).

I absolutely loved it that Lydia’s sexual awakening was a coming into personal power. I think every romance writer claims to do this, but far fewer manage it.

Did he like it? Oh, she did not care. This restless, breathless feeling knocking through her might have been desire, but it could as easily be anger. The only thing clear to her was that she’d had it wrong, worrying about what she revealed of herself of what he or anyone else might think about her. It was not their opinions that mattered. ‘I do not do this for you,’ she said. I do it for myself.

This sets James back in a way that romance readers expect and enjoy:

She had warned him, once. I possess a talent for a memorable exit. But he hadn’t listened. His opinion of her was much like a sand castle: it stood in constant need of repair.

As in all the best romances, James and Lydia need each other to become capable of loving each other. Duran reminds us that love requires a mature, resilient, open-eyed kind of faith, something neither has managed alone. As Lydia thinks in yet another wonderful passage:

Faith. She knew better than anyone what it was. More durable than any substance science had discovered — and when it shattered, more violent and cutting than glass. She would walk across its shards for the rest of her life. At every step the pain would be with her.

Like Tumperkin, I can’t wait to read Phin’s book, which I already own. The sequel baiting was pretty blatant in a late scene where we meet Mina, one of my few criticisms of the book, but it was also quite effective, so what do I know? I can say I ended up with seven pages of Kindle notes, every one of them a reminder of a turn of phrase or bit of characterization or setting that moved or awed me. It’s so nice to have another autobuy author for my very short list.

And for anyone who made it to the end of this post and would like a copy of Bound By Your Touch, I happen to have an extra copy. Make a comment by Monday at midnight EST to be entered in a drawing.




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Your Favorite Author and Her Favorite Songs

I was just preparing my review of Ann Aguirre‘s Grimspace, and in one of her interviews, I came across a comment she made about the songs she was listening to when she wrote that book:

Ms. Aguirre writes (over at the Bradford Bunch) that she was listening to the following when writing Grimspace:

I wrote Grimspace over a year ago, was finishing up summer of ‘06. Let me look at my playlist and see what I was listening to back then. Looks like Placebo and Blue October. Here are some songs that influenced Jax and March:

Hate Me – Blue October
Sound of Pulling Heaven Down

Because I Want You – Placebo
Song to Say Goodbye
Infrared
Blind

Music has always been important to me, but it had never occurred to me that writers can use music to enhance their muse (I know. Duh.). This past spring, I was having a slightly difficult time. I can’t complain, because I was choosing between two good things, but one of them would have meant cataclysmic change, and let’s just say not everyone was happy for me. Luckily, I had my husband and other folks to help me process it all.  But I couldn’t have gotten through it without music, and I had three songs in particular on a constant loop: Annie Lennox’s A Thousand Beautiful Things, The Flaming Lips’ Love The World You Find, and, when I felt like saying a big “fuck you” to everyone, the White Stripes’ Seven Nation Army.

So, I thought I would look around and see what some authors I like have to say about the music that inspired them. Here’s what I found:

Read the rest of this entry »

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