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Juliet Dymoke (1919–2001)

Auteur de A Pride of Kings

31+ oeuvres 280 utilisateurs 11 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: J. DYMOKE

Séries

Œuvres de Juliet Dymoke

A Pride of Kings (1978) 52 exemplaires
The Lord of Greenwich (1980) 31 exemplaires
The Sun In Splendor (1980) 26 exemplaires
The Royal Griffin (1978) 24 exemplaires
The Lion of Mortimer (1979) 23 exemplaires
Henry of the High Rock (1971) 19 exemplaires
Of the Ring of Earls (1973) 19 exemplaires
The Cloisterman (1969) 13 exemplaires
The Lion's Legacy (1974) 7 exemplaires
The White Cockade (1979) 5 exemplaires
A Border Knight (1987) 5 exemplaires
London in the Eighteenth Century (1971) 4 exemplaires
A Kind of Warfare (1981) 3 exemplaires
Ride to Glencoe (1989) 2 exemplaires
Serpent in Eden (1974) 2 exemplaires
The Making of Molly March (1996) 2 exemplaires
Hollanders House (1991) 1 exemplaire
Treason in November (1978) 1 exemplaire
Bend Sinister (1975) 1 exemplaire
Born for Victory (1974) 1 exemplaire
Prisoner of Rome (1975) 1 exemplaire
The French Captive (1997) 1 exemplaire
A Fragile Marriage (1995) 1 exemplaire
Winter's Daughter (1994) 1 exemplaire
March to Corunna (1985) 1 exemplaire
Two Flags for France (1986) 1 exemplaire

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Critiques

Enjoyable

I enjoyed this book on William Marshall. I only knew a little about him from other I about other people. This is the first story that was centered around him. He was a great and most loyal knight even when it was difficult to do so. I look forward to the other books in the series.
 
Signalé
ChrisCaz | 1 autre critique | Feb 23, 2021 |
It was just o.k.

It had it's good moments but I have read far better historical fiction on Eleanor and Simon than this. I liked the first book much better.
 
Signalé
ChrisCaz | 2 autres critiques | Feb 23, 2021 |
Just okay

Again this book was just okay. Not enough dialogue for me. Not sure if I will continue to read others in the series
 
Signalé
ChrisCaz | 1 autre critique | Feb 23, 2021 |
I'm back into that phase where I will read anything to do with The Scarlet Pimpernel/the French Revolution, so when this popped up on Amazon, the price and the pretty cover convinced me to download a copy, even though I had never heard of the author. (I thought Juliet Dymoke was a new, self-published author, but she was actually an old school historical romance writer who died in 2001.)

The Queen's Diamond is an old-fashioned novel, like the author, but then I love Baroness Orczy's Pimpernel series, so that worked for me. Any F-Rev fiction readers who prefer the hero/heroine to be 100% red, white and blue cockade-wearing, Robespierre-quoting, guillotine-wielding republicans will not be amused, however, because the central characters are all royalist aristos. What bothered me more was the sudden launch into an almost constant stream of dialogue with little action, like I'd missed the first few chapters. Once I caught onto what was happening, and who was who, I grew more involved in the story, but lost interest again towards the end - when the Queen's Blue Diamond, a necklace stolen along with the crown jewels from the Royal Treasury in 1792, finally entered the story.

A dry novel in the style, though lacking the same drive or romance, of Baroness Orczy and Jean Plaidy.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
AdonisGuilfoyle | Jul 21, 2018 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
31
Aussi par
2
Membres
280
Popularité
#83,034
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
11
ISBN
57
Favoris
1

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