Short Version: 4.5 stars. I adored the hero and heroine and can’t remember another time I liked both protagonists so much. The plot was very good, but not quite great, so read it for Clara and Oliver, their every moment together is a delight.
Long Version: Looking forward to Clara’s book in Loretta Chase’s Dressmaker’s Series, I was not disappointed. You have to love it when it feels like a book was written with you in mind. Dukes Prefer Blondes featured a Nick and Nora Charles style courtship but, as it is a historical romance, in the Regency. Chase uses the narrative structure incredibly effectively to both maintain the brittle, consciously closed-off outward appearances of the main characters while still sharing their true feelings and the effect they have on one another. All books with an omniscient narrator can do this, but this genre really lends itself to it, and few novels have done it quite so well as Dukes Prefer Blondes.
Clara is beautiful and rich which is hard to feel sorry for, but she is also considered the top marital prize of her season and her time as a trophy is wearing on her. Men pursue and propose to her, but only for the potential notoriety of being the man who gains her acquiescence. They don’t really see her; they talk at Clara, not to her. She is “wrapped in cotton wool” and stifled in every attempt to assert, not even her independence, but her brainpower and energies in anything other than the most safe and stultifying activities. Her mother is very concerned about social status and any notion of womanhood which maintains it, so Clara is allowed to participate in charity work and her efforts bring her into contact with an impoverished young woman looking for her missing brother. When Clara needs someone to help her locate the boy, she is brought to barrister Oliver “Raven” Radford.
Having embraced a nickname originally intended as an insult, Raven is the cousin of a duke and the son of a younger son who made good practicing law. He’s not touched by scandal, but his family is, though they don’t care – at least not until he falls for Lady Clara. A man of searing intellect and deficient in tact, he is startled and fascinated by the goddess who has appeared before him and appears to have wits on par with her beauty, not that he will admit that out loud, although occasionally his powerful reaction to his magnificent equal overwhelms him long enough for some imprudent physical contact. Raven helps Clara out and she plagues him until he marries her. He knows they are a bad match on paper, as deeply as he may want her, but he cannot resist and she does not play fair. In the end, they find a surprising way forward and Clara gets the freedom she hoped for, but not in the form she expected.
The sub-plots about Raven’s contentious relationship with London’s underworld did not work as well for me as the love story, but as long as Raven and Clara were in the same room, I didn’t need anything else. Dukes Prefer Blondes had all the smart banter I love and managed to convey true depth of emotion without any flowery speeches and dramatic declarations which would make people trained not to express emotion uncomfortable.You want to read this book, you’ll want to re-read it, too. I have added Dukes Prefer Blondes to my streamlined recommendations list to make sure as many people know that as possible.
Also by Loretta Chase – I’ve read twelve of her books, but only reviewed two:
Lord of Scoundrels – CLASSIC!
Silk Is for Seduction
Links to my other reviews can be found on my complete reading list of books sorted by author or Author Commentary & The Tallies Shameful.
Purchased after reading the short version.
Oliver’s bluntness and lack of tact reminded me of Jonas Grantham, and I can barely think of a better compliment to a romance hero. I’m so glad you liked this. I also loved every interaction between Clara and Raven, but could have done without the crime boss revenge plot. That bit had me rolling my eyes.
You’re making me twitchy with this review – I still have two more people in front of me at the library. Between this and Malin’s review I’m now dying to read it! (and really questioning why I am bothering my current slog of a read).
It was all I could do not to simply include 47 quotes.
I’m so excited to start this (*thank you!*). I have to finish two I’m in the middle of first. And the 7 reviews I’m behind on. :( Keeping up with reviewing is way harder than I expected. My hat is off to all of you who have been doing this year after year.
I think we all fall behind. I do it in bursts and then stagger the posting dates, if that helps. Also, if I read several books in a series close together, I review them all in one. It saves time. I am working on the 4th book in a series right now and will be writing a fell swoop review afterwards.
I’m working on the Carla Kelly Channel Fleet trilogy review right now. I think they are going to get wrapped into a single review. Thanks for the great recommendation! I really liked all three and read them in 5 days. I’m not sure I could split them if I tried. Have you read the new Bowen/Kennedy follow-up to Him yet? Him was one of my favorite reads last year and I would say Us is 90% as good. I don’t know if I’ll even get to that review at all – but your Him review summed up my feelings about it perfectly, so I could leave it to you. ;)
FOLLOW UP? I didn’t know there was one and I looked like I’d been electrocuted when I read that. TO AMAZON!
WHAT?! Go! Go now! And, now I’m working on a review of that instead. Because everyone should know about it.
Oh, it’s been BOUGHTEN!
Ooh, I liked her Lord of Scoundrels. I’ll have to look into this one.
This book is definitely a keeper!
I’ve already re-read it skipping the subplot bits.