skygiants: Izumi and Sig Curtis from Fullmetal Alchemist embracing in front of a giant heart (curtises!)
[personal profile] skygiants
I've been meaning for months to write about a couple of Evie Dunmore romance novels, Bringing Down the Duke and Portrait of a Scotsman, which I read because my sister-in-law pushed them into my hands and said "you MUST bring these to Scotland! they are extremely silly but also the perfect vacation reads for reading In Scotland!"

I did not actually end up bringing them to read In Scotland, because they are large paperbacks and I was trying to allow myself luggage space to buy large paperbacks back from Scotland rather than lugging them to, but I read them on a later summer vacation so I could hand them back to my sister-in-law with a clear conscience. They are indeed very silly! I did not much like the first one but had a genuinely good time with the second, and also found them both sort of anthropologically fascinating as examples of how The Modern Historical Romance threads the needle of catering to all the particular reliable book-selling historical romance tropes with one hand while with the other continually assuring the reader that they are reading a Good and Feminist Book With Socially Progressive Mores, Do Not Worry About It.

These books are Victorian-era, and the connective tissue between them is that all the heroines are in a suffragette society Campaigning for the Women's Vote, and each of them will of course end up paired up with a very wealthy and probably aristocratic man who can support the cause! huzzah!!

In Bringing Down the Duke, our heroine Annabelle is a Cinderella figure who has gotten a suffragette scholarship to attend Oxford despite her family's unwillingness to waste money on sending her and also lose out on her free labor. At the beginning of the book she assures her relatives that she will somehow find the cash to pay for the salary of her replacement if they allow her to go, and then spends a couple pages stressing about that, which led me foolishly to believe that economics were going to be a major concern of the text. This of course was very silly of me as she almost immediately ends up in the Duke's house, where she spends most of the middle of the book convalescing from a convenient illness and having fantastic sex, and we never worry about this again.

Why is she in the Duke's house? uhhh they're trying to recruit him for the suffragette cause despite his reputation as a misanthropic Tory. Why is the Duke a misanthropic Tory? uhhhh he wants to buy back all his ancestral lands and he is profoundly wounded by the fact that a couple of them are still missing from the collection. The book takes this very seriously as an understandable cause of grief and it's presented as a serious sacrifice at the end when he gives up on His Ancestral Lands in order to support the Feminist Cause. huzzah! Feminism!! But, you know, it's True Love and he's not actively the WORST man in the world, so, fine. At one point Annabelle receives a proposal from a very nice professor to marry him in name only so she can go with him to pursue her dream research abroad -- at this point her only other option on-hand is being the Duke's Secret Mistress because he Cannot Marry Her, for Ancestral Land Reasons -- and it is so funny how the book does not even feel the need to try and make this research marriage of convenience proposition sound unappealing. This is not a St. John situation, everything about this seems like a great deal for her, but the Rules of the Feminist Historical Romance say she has to end up with the sexy duke and that, eventually, she WILL end up with the sexy duke, AND they will be married, AND she will still get to study at Oxford and be a member of the suffragette society, so why should we waste page space on anything else? And obviously it works, this book has sold Five Million Bazillion Copies. The tropes aren't my tropes but no one can say the balancing act is not performed to absolute perfection.

Portrait of a Scotsman is more fun for me because it is tropes I like -- the heroine in this one is the cheerfully artistic daughter of a big merchant family, and the hero is a dour Scots billionaire who rose from poverty and has ever since been gleefully using his financial leverage to trampling abusive aristocrats under his vengeful heel, and he ends up manipulating her into a marriage of convenience for reasons I don't remember.

THE BOOK: but is it ETHICAL to trample aristocrats under a vengeful financial heel? Does it perhaps make this man evil?
ME: well, no, but being a billionaire in and of itself migh makes him evil --
THE BOOK: no, no, I promise he's an ethical billionaire. He buys up impoverished coal mining towns in Scotland that are being abused by their aristocratic owners, which he knows about because he grew up in a coal mining town that was being abused by its aristocratic owners and experienced all these evils firsthand, and turns them into collectivist enterprises! power to the workers!
ME: okay great! thank you for ensuring that your billionaire hero is the world's MOST ethical billionaire. this is very very funny but I do appreciate it
THE BOOK: wait but does trampling aristocrats under his vengeful heel perhaps make him evil
ME: no I don't think so

Meanwhile the heroine bonds with the coal mining town inhabitants and decides that she's getting nowhere with this painting business, she's only middling at it and has nothing new to say with it, so instead she's going to channel her artistic talents into learning about PHOTOGRAPHY and pioneer PHOTOGRAPHIC EXHIBITS FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE. god bless!!

(I did keep expecting an explicit reveal that our heroine was Jewish -- her name is Hattie Greenfield, she comes from a large multinational merchant family with links to iirc the Ephrussi or some other famous real-world historical Jewish banking family, she's notably red-headed, there's an offhand reference to a grandparent having 'converted' to Anglicanism but it doesn't specify from what? Evie Dunmore I'm not sure why all this coding without actually saying it, what are you so nervous about?)

Date: 2024-11-24 04:00 pm (UTC)
pauraque: Webby and Lena fistbump (ducktales fistbump)
From: [personal profile] pauraque
Hm, a dour Scottish self-made billionaire who uses his wealth to combat also-wealthy villains.

So... Scrooge McDuck?

Date: 2024-11-25 08:48 pm (UTC)
oracne: turtle (Default)
From: [personal profile] oracne
LOL!

Date: 2024-11-24 04:02 pm (UTC)
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
From: [personal profile] luzula
and also found them both sort of anthropologically fascinating as examples of how The Modern Historical Romance threads the needle of catering to all the particular reliable book-selling historical romance tropes with one hand while with the other continually assuring the reader that they are reading a Good and Feminist Book With Socially Progressive Mores, Do Not Worry About It.

So a while ago I read The Book of Sanchia Stapleton by Una L. Silberrad from 1929, which has a historical setting and contains a romance (I don't want to call it a historical romance genre-wise). It's funny how much I shipped the main characters and how much more genuinely progressive the book felt in the way it established trust and mutual respect and equal partnership between the main characters than so many books published later! Much recommend the book, can hook you up with pdf:s if you want.

ETA: But then, it's not having to cater to historical romance tropes, so of course it's easier for the book to achieve that! ETA 2: OTOH, the heroine DOES end up married to an aristocrat, so it's not like it's completely avoiding those tropes.
Edited Date: 2024-11-24 04:04 pm (UTC)

Date: 2024-11-24 06:21 pm (UTC)
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
From: [personal profile] luzula
Drop me an email at luzula@fripost.org! I hope you appreciate my scanning it while sitting at the university library because I couldn't bring home the UK copy that I had gotten via ILL...

Date: 2024-11-24 04:51 pm (UTC)
theladyscribe: (miss fisher)
From: [personal profile] theladyscribe
I would be interested in the Silberrad if you are open to sharing!

Date: 2024-11-24 06:21 pm (UTC)
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
From: [personal profile] luzula
Drop me an email at luzula@fripost.org!

Date: 2024-11-25 05:05 pm (UTC)
lirazel: Donna, Toby, and Josh from TWW in a truck in a Kansas cornfield ([tv] 20 hours in america)
From: [personal profile] lirazel
Do you mind if a stranger also emails you for PDFs? (Totally cool if not!)

Date: 2024-11-26 07:47 am (UTC)
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
From: [personal profile] luzula
Sure, go ahead! : ) I guess I just don't want to put up a public link since the copyright in my country doesn't go out until 1st of January 2025, but it's out of copyright in the US and in all author's death +50 countries. Not that I think anyone is about to go after me for it!

ETA: Correction: I said above that it's from 1929, but actually it's 1927, so definitely public domain in the US.
Edited Date: 2024-11-26 07:51 am (UTC)

Date: 2024-11-25 12:40 am (UTC)
genarti: Knees-down view of woman on tiptoe next to bookshelves (Default)
From: [personal profile] genarti
Oooh, this sounds fascinating! (I would request it from you but, if you're willing, I can just grab it from Becca?)

It's always fascinating to see how works that predate modern versions of the expected tropes go in different directions, and aren't even doing it as deliberate divergence because they don't yet have to react to those trope expectations!

Date: 2024-11-26 07:52 am (UTC)
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
From: [personal profile] luzula
Sure, grab it from Becca! I'll be interested to see what more people make of it--I have one other friend who's read it so far ([personal profile] garonne) and she loved it.

Date: 2024-11-24 04:54 pm (UTC)
theladyscribe: peggy carter and jarvis sitting back to back (the spy who loved me)
From: [personal profile] theladyscribe
I really enjoy your book reviews, and these sound very silly and fun, if not really my cup of tea. (I have learned that I am just not cut out for romance novels, even when the tropes are ones I enjoy. I need other plots to be the focus rather than taking a backseat to the romance lol.)

Date: 2024-11-24 05:27 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] mme_n_b
In genre novels, especially in romance, coding is generally "because sales". Chances are, at some point the author had a reason for Hattie's convert background and the editor gently explained that Jews decrease sales of mainstream romance. Yay for explicitly Jew-targeted romance I guess. Our ghetto is the nicest.

Date: 2024-11-24 10:53 pm (UTC)
obopolsk: (Default)
From: [personal profile] obopolsk
This post is reminding me that I had a good time reading these and then...almost entirely forgot them. For whatever that's worth! I did genuinely enjoy the friend group and the way they pop up in each other's books, but the romances themselves have not stuck with me at all.

Date: 2024-11-25 01:22 am (UTC)
delphi: An illustrated crow kicks a little ball of snow with a contemplative expression. (Default)
From: [personal profile] delphi
This was super interesting to read! I really want to get more into professionally published romance - I just haven't managed to find the right subgenre/imprint/authors - but I've been hugely interested in how current historical romances balance romantic fantasy, fantasies about their historical settings, and the narrative maintenance of modern mores or comforts to preserve those aforementioned fantasy elements for readers.

Date: 2024-11-25 08:53 pm (UTC)
oracne: turtle (Default)
From: [personal profile] oracne
The Bridgerton tv show is making its popularity felt, and that series is very much what used to be called "wallpaper" Romance, updated for tv to feel more modern. I think there's a lot more questioning of historical mores these days, to a certain degree. Courtney Milan is one well-known example who has a bigger range of roles for women in her historicals (which she began doing before the Bridgerton tv series).

Date: 2024-11-25 01:43 am (UTC)
ceitfianna: (Books don't forget to fly)
From: [personal profile] ceitfianna
I've been wondering about these books and the second one sounds fascinating. I'm currently reading Earl's Trip which suffers a bit from contemporary romance writer writes a historical, so gimmicky chapter titles and little bit too much not like other girls. I'm almost finished with it and today I kept thinking about the things that didn't make sense, but the writing's good as is the set up, childhood friends falling in love kind of thing. But it reminds me of how few contemporary romances seem to have the depth I want.

Date: 2024-11-25 02:29 am (UTC)
evewithanapple: anya posing with her hat | <lj user="diamondeyesss"</lj> (anas | pitch the quick fantastic)
From: [personal profile] evewithanapple
Watching historical romance writers continually grapple with The Aristocrat Problem is so endlessly compelling. You've got your Cat Sebastian "the only good duke is a duke who gives up his title" (at least until she sequel where she whiffed it) your Grace Burrowes "this duke only has his position due to a genealogical fluke and he really doesn't care about his dukedom but he will spend a bunch of money on charity," your KJ Charles "dukes are bad, but isn't Bolshevism also kind of bad?" and . . . whatever this is.

Date: 2024-11-25 03:05 am (UTC)
brownbetty: (Default)
From: [personal profile] brownbetty
It gets to the point where one kind of prefers the ones why they don't think about it too much and are just like, "Yay, money is great!" instead of elaborately justifying it.

I mean. Kind of.

Date: 2024-11-25 08:53 pm (UTC)
oracne: turtle (Default)
From: [personal profile] oracne
This!

Date: 2024-11-26 04:01 pm (UTC)
evewithanapple: foxy robin hood with an arrow in his cap | <lj user="evewithanapple"</lj> (dis | we just borrow a bit)
From: [personal profile] evewithanapple
His "I would never use my ducal powers to force my tenants to vote according to my political leanings" shirt is raising a lot of questions already answered by the shirt!

Date: 2024-11-25 12:05 pm (UTC)
kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)
From: [personal profile] kate_nepveu

my ebook catalog says I've read the first one.

please insert Gandalf no memory of this place gif here.

(but I'll bump the second one up the list!)

Edited Date: 2024-11-25 12:05 pm (UTC)

Date: 2024-11-25 05:04 pm (UTC)
lirazel: A drawing of Emma M. Lion against a yellow background ([lit] imperterritus)
From: [personal profile] lirazel
I also read Bringing Down the Duke and did not enjoy it and really wanted the book to be about the version of her life where she marries the very nice professor and maybe she falls in love with him and maybe she doesn't but either way she gets to fulfill her research ambitions, etc. But I think the tropes I am most interested in are not the tropes that most people are interested in.

The second book does sound at least more entertaining, but yeah, balancing Historical Tropes with Feminist Girlpower makes for some...interesting writing choices.

(I did keep expecting an explicit reveal that our heroine was Jewish -- her name is Hattie Greenfield, she comes from a large multinational merchant family with links to iirc the Ephrussi or some other famous real-world historical Jewish banking family, she's notably red-headed, there's an offhand reference to a grandparent having 'converted' to Anglicanism but it doesn't specify from what? Evie Dunmore I'm not sure why all this coding without actually saying it, what are you so nervous about?)

That's...weird.

Date: 2024-11-27 03:54 pm (UTC)
lokifan: black Converse against a black background (Default)
From: [personal profile] lokifan
Ahaha, loved the review as ever!

Profile

skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (Default)
skygiants

June 2025

S M T W T F S
123 45 67
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930     

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 15th, 2025 11:36 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios