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Judith Ivory

Auteur de The Proposition

12 oeuvres 1,978 utilisateurs 129 critiques 15 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Judy Cuevas

Œuvres de Judith Ivory

The Proposition (1999) 361 exemplaires
Beast (1997) 319 exemplaires
Untie My Heart (2002) 291 exemplaires
Black Silk (1991) 265 exemplaires
The Indiscretion (2001) 225 exemplaires
Sleeping Beauty (1998) 201 exemplaires
Angel in a Red Dress (1988) 159 exemplaires
Bliss (1995) 87 exemplaires
Dance (1996) 66 exemplaires
Indescretion, The 1 exemplaire
La bella addormentata 1 exemplaire

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Critiques

4.5 stars

This will always be the HE BROKE DOWN THE DAMN DOOR TO GET TO HER book to me.

An older former courtesan/mistress and the up and coming scholar that refuses to go away, fall in love despite the challenges.

Beginning has a vague vibe of screwball comedy, the middle has hot chemistry/building friendship, later second half has a villain trying to mess things up for them, and then the ending returns to some screwball comedy vibes to deliver the HEA.

I buddy read this so for my thoughts and comments on it Sleeping Beauty buddy read
This author always gets me talking, she's so good at depicting love in all it's highs and lows and never fails at the emotion.

The pacing did feel off in the later second half but this is a rich story if you like the plot working to enrich the romance, which did make some moments feel a little slow.

Read this solely for their first sex scene but stick around for all those little emotional moments that can hit you right in the heart. Then go to the buddy read and talk about it with me because I'll never tire of discussing this!
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
WhiskeyintheJar | 12 autres critiques | Mar 16, 2024 |
This was fine. Judith Ivory's writing is so good I could cry so it was worth it for me to read.
 
Signalé
s_carr | 9 autres critiques | Feb 25, 2024 |
November 2023 read: I feel the same way about this book as I did the first time I read it.
sidenote: I didn't pick this up the first time I read the book bc I hadn't yet read Patricia Gaffney's Wyckerly trilogy . . . a vicar of Wyckerly and his wife make an appearance and I am CURIOUS! Did Judy write that as a wink to her friend Patty??

April 2023 read: This story made me very emotional. I just love Judith Ivory's characters, especially her heroines. They make me swoon with love and adoration. I swear, every book I read by Ivory has my new favorite heroine and Coco is no exception. She is smart, kind, a secret-keeper and beautiful. A kind of beauty that shines as it stuns. She has lived a life and much of it - but not all - is slowly revealed within the story.

Although I did love this book, there is some indefensible colonialist bullshit and racism. James Stoker, the MMC, is a geologist back from Africa after an expedition gone awry. He and several other people were meant to survey the land for Queen and country and bring back samples (namely gold LOTS and LOTS of gold). Things turn badly and James is the only person left alive from the original crew. He spends time living with an African tribe (one made up by the author) and eventually returns home to England. Now that he is home, he is tasked with going thru all the documentation and samples collected so crown and country may return to the area James found all the gold. But James is reluctant to provide exact details of his location so he may protect the tribe he spent time with.

. . . I can kind of get what Ivory was trying to do here, however it fell short of the mark by miles. I feel there could have been better choices the author should have made to illustrate how British colonialism is a blight on all things it touches. It's unfortunate because this book really did move me.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
s_carr | 12 autres critiques | Feb 25, 2024 |
December 2023: I am weak in the knees about this book and Judy Cuevas.
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.
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April 2023: “Art is going where others say you cannot go, where others can’t even imagine existing. Art is following your pinpoint of vision until it lights up in a burst to reveal a place others have never seen, not even in their imaginations, yet a place that, once revealed, is so universal and so luminously associated with Truth that this place can never be darkened from the mind of man again.”

Sebastian de Saint Vallier in a letter to his brother Bernard “Nardi” de Saint Vallier… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
s_carr | 10 autres critiques | Feb 25, 2024 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
12
Membres
1,978
Popularité
#13,003
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
129
ISBN
60
Langues
3
Favoris
15

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