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Rating:  Summary: Rather trite; unrealistic, yet I read the whole thing! Review: Cripple with a clubfoot, lady's maid Meg Quincy was an unusual servant. She knew how to read, loved poetry, and spoke like a lady. Richard, Lord Beaumont, vowed to never marry, but his dying mother begged that he propose to Allegra, their neighbor's obnoxious daughter. Trapped by love for his mother, Richard agrees, only to be taken by Meg. Mysteries about Meg's background complicate her work for Lady Semple's daughter, Allegra.A wannabe bit of froth and frolic that is too predictable and lacks depth and real humor. The ending was unrealistic. Kennedy shows promise, but needs more logic and realism in the relationships between servant and master/mistress.
Rating:  Summary: Weak and farfetched. Review: Cripple with a clubfoot, lady's maid Meg Quincy was an unusual servant. She knew how to read, loved poetry, and spoke like a lady. Richard, Lord Beaumont, vowed to never marry, but his dying mother begged that he propose to Allegra, their neighbor's obnoxious daughter. Trapped by love for his mother, Richard agrees, only to be taken by Meg. Mysteries about Meg's background complicate her work for Lady Semple's daughter, Allegra. A wannabe bit of froth and frolic that is too predictable and lacks depth and real humor. The ending was unrealistic. Kennedy shows promise, but needs more logic and realism in the relationships between servant and master/mistress.
Rating:  Summary: Rather trite; unrealistic, yet I read the whole thing! Review: He (Lord Beaumont) was an aristocrat and she (Meg Quincy), a ladies maid. Even a young servant raised along with a nobleman's daughter to be literate and charming could never have caught Richard Beaumont's eye ... or could she. I found it difficult to suspend belief, but this is fiction! So, I followed along with the unlikely romance. It was rather sweet. Meg Quincy just never learned to be humble and it got her into trouble time and time again. Lord Beaumont, an ever sought after bachelor, had never met a spitfire like Meg. They had a secret rendezvous location (a glade near the river) but only exchanged stolen kisses. Lord Beaumont was engaged to Meg's new and horrid mistress Allegra - so how could she believe his whispers of love. Because of a "deathbed" promise to his mother, Richard engaged himself to the despicable Allegra while realizing himself in love with Meg. He offers to make Meg his mistress and she rejects that offer. How can they ever have more?? There are secrets to be exposed and mysteries to solve. I will not spoil it for you. The secondary characters are actually interesting. The passive Lady Semple, angry Aunt Lydia and the detestable Allegra all have interesting facets to them. I felt horrible for Meg, who had such a pathetic life - did no one hate that the family she had been with since birth to age 18 just dumped her practically into the street??? Anyway, this is a quick afternoon read - but not in anyway realistic to the class conscious Regency times.
Rating:  Summary: ATouching Story Review: I really enjoyed this book, and I have reread it a couple of times. I found it a touching story, and I loved the characters. Meg and Richard are appealing as individuals and a couple, and many of the minor characters were interesting, too. Allegra was a selfish monster, Aunt Lydia an overbearing, conniving shrew, Edward a jolly, lighthearted friend, and Lady Semple was a gentle, suffering mother. I found the ending especially touching. I recommend this to any reader who is sensitive and likes to cheer the underdog!
Rating:  Summary: Secrets are hard to keep . . . Review: Servants are the invisible portion of a household. Aren't they? If that is so, then why is it that Richard, Lord Beaumont, heir to the Marquis of Montclaire cannot seem to command his thoughts away from young Meg Quincy, lady's maid to Caroline, daughter of the Earl of Wallingford? 'Tis true that Meg is hardly your run-of-the-mill servant girl, being as knowledgeable about poetry and poets, painting, and butterflies as she is about mending and ironing. She hasn't dropped an 'h' since she first learned to talk. She could be a diamond in Society, if she weren't a lady's maid, and if she weren't crippled. But Meg has learned to accomodate the club-foot with which she was born, and the first eighteen years of her life were not all that bad. She was almost, not quite, but almost part of the Wallingford family. Until the Countess died, and the new Countess moved in. With her son. Poor Meg soon needed a new position, and, surprising even himself, Richard appealed to his friend and near neighbor, Lady Semple, to take the girl into her household. Lady Semple has, after all, a daughter-- Allegra -- desperately in need of a superior lady's maid, one who might curb some of the girl's hoydenish tendencies. Meg soon learns that it has been the fondest wish of the two fathers - Richard's and Allegra's - that their two children should marry. Richard being honorable, agrees, in spite of his feelings for the lady's maid. But then, Lady Semple's secret is exposed, and everyone's plans are turned topsy-turvey. How wonderful for readers that Shirley Kennedy has found a new publisher, as writing, plotting and characters such as she produces should not be kept secret.
Rating:  Summary: Secrets are hard to keep . . . Review: Servants are the invisible portion of a household. Aren't they? If that is so, then why is it that Richard, Lord Beaumont, heir to the Marquis of Montclaire cannot seem to command his thoughts away from young Meg Quincy, lady's maid to Caroline, daughter of the Earl of Wallingford? 'Tis true that Meg is hardly your run-of-the-mill servant girl, being as knowledgeable about poetry and poets, painting, and butterflies as she is about mending and ironing. She hasn't dropped an 'h' since she first learned to talk. She could be a diamond in Society, if she weren't a lady's maid, and if she weren't crippled. But Meg has learned to accomodate the club-foot with which she was born, and the first eighteen years of her life were not all that bad. She was almost, not quite, but almost part of the Wallingford family. Until the Countess died, and the new Countess moved in. With her son. Poor Meg soon needed a new position, and, surprising even himself, Richard appealed to his friend and near neighbor, Lady Semple, to take the girl into her household. Lady Semple has, after all, a daughter-- Allegra -- desperately in need of a superior lady's maid, one who might curb some of the girl's hoydenish tendencies. Meg soon learns that it has been the fondest wish of the two fathers - Richard's and Allegra's - that their two children should marry. Richard being honorable, agrees, in spite of his feelings for the lady's maid. But then, Lady Semple's secret is exposed, and everyone's plans are turned topsy-turvey. How wonderful for readers that Shirley Kennedy has found a new publisher, as writing, plotting and characters such as she produces should not be kept secret.
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