Having just finished a book in which the main characters were rarely in the same country, it was a pleasant change to read a book in which the hero and heroine are almost always in the same room, and by one of my favourite authors as well. Julie Anne Long’s new, potentially penultimate, Pennyroyal Green novel, It Started with a Scandal, includes small visits from previous stories’ characters and the return of one of her most charming men, the displaced French aristocrat and raffish rogue Lord Phillipe Lavay of I Kissed an Earl.
Assaulted by no less than six thugs, Lavay is recuperating in a somewhat sad little house in Pennyroyal Green. As a tenant, rather than the owner, the servants have become shiftless and indolent. (As a plebe, rather than the gentry, this is not a trope I enjoy.) Enter a new housekeeper in the form of Elise Fountain. Abandoned by her family when she had a child out-of-wedlock, she worked at the local school for recalcitrant young ladies until her unseemliness became widely known. Moving onward and belowstairsward, this is her first position as a servant and her desperate circumstances provide enormous motivation to succeed. Lavay, leonine and grumpy, lays odds against her success, but doesn’t count on Elise’s determination or the conveniences of historical romance plotting.
As in all Long novels, each of the leads has to lay down their inhibitions and be willing to emotionally bare themselves for a chance at true happiness. Elise has spent years trying to tuck in her natural exuberance and verve in order to avoid either repeating her youthful mistake or making another one. Lavay has been working towards restoring his family’s status and wealth in French society but, while his behavior is strangely honourable, I don’t think that anyone feels the French Revolution was a bad idea. Lavay needs to come to terms with the loss of what he considers his proper life and Elise with the chance that she can still build a future beyond safety and simple survival.
I have read so very many romances at this point and I always look forward to a new Julie Anne Long book. It Started with a Scandal never quite grabbed me the way some of her other books have *cough*What I Did for a Duke*cough*. I found it a little too divorced from historical reality and a little too neat, even for a genre with carefully prescribed outcomes. The novel was still an entertaining read as Long is incapable of being anything less than a wonderfully clever writer, but not necessarily a potentially re-readable story. On to Lyon and Olivia’s book The Legend of Lyon Redmond coming in October which I have already ordered and may take a day off work to read in a wantonly luxurious gesture.
A complete summary of Julie Anne Long’s catalogue, with recommendations, can be found here.
Links to my other reviews can be found on my complete reading list of books sorted by author or Author Commentary & The Tallies Shameful.
Great review! I’m getting this on the weekend after my sister finishes it. I was intrigued by this one, but really, at this point, we’re all just spinning wheels for Lyon and Olivia. I guarantee I’ll cry for that one!
Poor Julie Anne Long. That is one anticipated book. NO PRESSURE, JULIE!
I do hope poor devoted Lansdowne gets a novella.
Code or virus?
I find the newly released cover for The Legend of Lyon Redmond so cheerful and encouraging. None of the annoying trend recently of a woman seen from behind in an unlaced dress with NO undergarments. That trend may be my least favourite of all the romance cover trends since I started reading the genre again. But Lyon and Olivia (I can’t imagine it’s another couple) embracing like that (not in an unnatural clinch position) is just so sweet. I just hope she can live up to my expectations. An eleven book build-up (and What I Did for a Duke) has me all anticipation.
I agree that it is so sweet.
I always forget that Olivia, like all the Everseas, has dark hair. Because they describe her as so small and slightly hard that translates as blonde for me.
Sounds like a pass until October. I’m mildly curious to see how a noble who seeks to return his family to status in society weds a servant (*gasp* A SERVANT!!!) but as our library has a sad lack of historical romance, will likely not get a chance to find out.
What I Did for a Duke indeed remains the high water mark for Long – definitely on the top ten list.
It’s certainly on my Top Ten and to think I initially avoided it because of the age difference.
I’ve read 15 Long books and, to my mind, she has 1 classic, 1 excellent, and three very good novels. One in three is a pretty fantastic standard, but she is due for another really good one.