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Barbara Metzger (1944–2023)

Auteur de Regency Christmas Wishes [2003]

85+ oeuvres 3,839 utilisateurs 100 critiques 5 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: From author website, BarbaraMetzger.com

Séries

Œuvres de Barbara Metzger

Regency Christmas Wishes [2003] (2003) 151 exemplaires
La Robe de Leurs Rêves [4-in-1] (2005) — Contributeur — 117 exemplaires
Ace of Hearts (2005) 98 exemplaires
The Hourglass (2007) 96 exemplaires
Wedded Bliss (2004) 88 exemplaires
Miss Lockharte's Letters (1998) 86 exemplaires
The Bargain Bride (Signet Eclipse) (2009) 84 exemplaires
Father Christmas (1995) 82 exemplaires
The Duel (2005) 80 exemplaires
A Worthy Wife (2000) 79 exemplaires
Jack of Clubs (2006) 78 exemplaires
Miss Treadwell's Talent (1999) 75 exemplaires
A Debt to Delia (2002) 74 exemplaires
Queen of Diamonds (2006) 73 exemplaires
Truly Yours (2007) 73 exemplaires
A Perfect Gentleman (2004) 72 exemplaires
Saved by Scandal (2000) 70 exemplaires
Cupboard Kisses (1989) 63 exemplaires
Regency Christmas Magic (2004) (2004) — Contributeur — 62 exemplaires
A Loyal Companion (1992) 61 exemplaires
Snowdrops and Scandalbroth (1997) 60 exemplaires
An Enchanted Affair (1996) 59 exemplaires
The Painted Lady (2001) 59 exemplaires
Wedding Belles (Anthology 5-in-1) (2004) — Contributeur — 57 exemplaires
The Primrose Path (1997) 57 exemplaires
Christmas Wishes (1992) 54 exemplaires
The Diamond Key (2003) 52 exemplaires
An Angel for the Earl (1994) 50 exemplaires
An Affair of Interest (1991) 48 exemplaires
The Grand Hotel (Anthology 5-in-1) (2000) — Contributeur — 48 exemplaires
Miss Westlake's Windfall (2001) 48 exemplaires
Minor Indiscretions (1991) 47 exemplaires
Lord Heartless (1998) 46 exemplaires
Lady Sparrow (2002) 46 exemplaires
The Christmas Carrolls (1997) 43 exemplaires
Lady Whilton's Wedding (1995) 43 exemplaires
An Early Engagement (1990) 42 exemplaires
Rakes' Ransom (1986) 41 exemplaires
A Suspicious Affair (1994) 40 exemplaires
Lady in Green (1993) 34 exemplaires
My Lady InnKeeper (1985) 32 exemplaires
Earl and the Heiress (1982) 30 exemplaires
Bething's Folly (1982) 29 exemplaires
Rake's Ransom / A Loyal Companion (2006) 29 exemplaires
A Regency Christmas [Anthology 4-in-1] (1994) — Contributeur — 28 exemplaires
Valentines (1995) 27 exemplaires
Autumn Loves (Anthology 4-in-1) (1993) — Contributeur — 25 exemplaires
Valentines / Road to Ruin (2004) 22 exemplaires
Love, Louisa (2003) 18 exemplaires
Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1991) 14 exemplaires
The House of Cards Trilogy (2012) 4 exemplaires
An Enchanted Christmas (2014) 4 exemplaires
The Proof is in the Pudding (1996) 3 exemplaires
Autumn Glory and Other Stories (2013) 3 exemplaires
The True Love Trilogy (3-in-1) (2014) 2 exemplaires
The Lucky Coin (2003) 1 exemplaire
Christmas Wish List (1999) 1 exemplaire
Little Miracles (2000) 1 exemplaire
The Enchanted Earl (2004) 1 exemplaire
Mylady Weihnachtsband 2003 (2003) 1 exemplaire
Wooing the Wolf (2005) 1 exemplaire
Una deuda con Delia (2010) 1 exemplaire
Een man van eer 1 exemplaire

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Re-read, November 2022
Aha! I could not for the life of me remember which book had a governess-type character wounded and ill and locked in an attic room wherein she is discovered and carried down by a gentleman rescuer.
This is that book. Phew. One less thing to worry about.
Other than that, I enjoyed it pretty well but slightly less than the first time through.

Original review follows:

Another pleasant surprise in a Regency novel... this one has amusing farce and believable romance, although some of the assassination attempts on the heroine do strain credulity! However, I think you're meant to take the whole book as a fun romp and find plenty to laugh about.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Alishadt | 1 autre critique | Feb 25, 2023 |
The December 2022 #TBRChallenge is "Festive." I chose a collection of traditional Regency Christmas stories by quite well-known authors. The collection started out beautifully, sagged in the middle, and by the end, unfortunately didn't quite make it back to the high bar the first couple of stories set.

"The Lucky Coin" by Barbara Metzger (63 pages) - ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Sir Adam Standish, an impoverished baronet from Suffolk, is taking the long mail coach ride into London to plead for an extension on his mortgage, which is his pessimistic about receiving. A wizened old man on the coach quite literally gives him a penny for his thoughts - or, at the very least, a coin, which is unusual enough that Adam decides to sell it after his banker turns down his application. While in the rare coin shop, he meets the most beautiful woman he's ever laid his eyes on - and she happens to have a cachet of the same type of unusual coins! Adam's luck changes for the better at every turn after meeting the beautiful Jenna, and it seems to all be down to that chance meeting with the old man on the coach. This story has a lovely, light, fairy-tale quality to it that makes all of the coincidences and reversal of fortune inside a week seem plausible. I quite adored Adam and Jenna, and thought them a good match in the end. Whimsical!

"Following Yonder Star" by Emma Jensen (74 pages) - ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Alice Ashe is serving as her younger sister's companion during said sister's final days of confinement with her pregnancy. Clarissa (the sister) is utterly self-absorbed; her husband died at Waterloo and she wants a girl child so that she can leave the Irish pigeonhole that is her late husband's estate and remake her life in London. A boy child - an heir - would tie her to the estate for the rest of her life, and she wants anything but that. The dead earl's brother, Sir Gareth, returns for the birth of his niece/nephew. He's hoping for a boy child, or else he's the heir to the estate that he never wanted. He's always been a world traveler, so the idea of being tied to one place in the wild Irish countryside is very much not appealing to him. Alice and Gareth were childhood sweethearts and shared a kiss before Gareth ran off to join the Navy and begin his world travels, so there is some old tension between them. An old Traveler woman advises both Alice and Gareth (at different times) to think hard about their choices in life, and this story culminates in a beautiful, emotional reunion scene between the two, enveloped in Christmas magic and Irish traditions. There is some delightful comic relief in the form of Alice and Clarissa's elderly father, who tries to wander off at every chance to "duel" with his old foe Mr. O'Neill.

At this point, I thought maybe there would be a continuing motif of wizened old strangers giving the MCs a hint at how to resolve their difficulties, and I was really looking forward to it, because one of the hardest things about short stories/novellas is buying that so much happens in such a short period of time. Basically having a fairy godmother/godfather waving a magic wand? That works for me, LOL. Unfortunately, that was not the case with the other 3 stories in this collection.

"The Merry Magpie" by Sandra Heath (61 pages) - ⭐⭐⭐
Sir Charles Neville's infidelity are revealed to his wife, Juliet, via her aunt's one-eyed magpie, Jack, in a horribly embarrassing, public scene one Christmas Eve. Juliet banishes Charles from their home, and he stays away for 6 years, eating his heart out. He knew it was a mistake to cheat on his wife, but basically he married young and thought that ~all~ men took mistresses as a matter of course, and who was he not to sow some wild oats? He realizes his mistake immediately, and wants nothing more than to beg his wife's forgiveness. He returns to the aunt's house to inquire as to where his wife might be, and runs into the infamously bad-mouthed Jack again. The magpie, being attracted to shiny things, steals the wedding band that Charles keeps on a ribbon around his neck and hides it, causing much dismay among the group. Juliet's aunt plays a bit of matchmaker, sending Charles to the island retreat where Juliet is staying, unbeknownst to either of them. The two confront each other and the bird, and eventually settle their differences. I thought this story was a bit unbalanced, and for being the titular character, Jack the magpie actually plays a very small role here.

"Best Wishes" by Edith Layton (55 pages) - ⭐⭐ 1/2
A newly married couple - Jonathan, Viscount Rexford and Pamela Arthur, the daughter of a country squire - are arguing about where they will spend their first Christmas together as a married couple. Jonathan has promised their presence at the Fanshawes' without his wife's consent, and she is very angry. Turns out Mrs. Fanshawe is a former mistress of Jonathan's, which YIKES ON BIKES, I get what Pamela doesn't want to go there. She'd rather spend the holiday with her enormous family in the country. Jonathan is very typically cool and icy Society, estranged from his family, and wants to give his wife the leg up she didn't have before she married him. They eventually compromise and decide to spend half the holiday with the Fanshawes (the Society invitation) and half the holiday with Pamela's family. Well, they end up leaving the Fanshawes early after Pamela is pawed by Mr. Fanshawe during a "scavenger hunt." Jonathan apologizes profusely and they go to the Arthurs in the country. Pamela is so thrilled to be back among her many brothers and sisters and memories that she doesn't realize just how much of an outcast Jonathan (and her brother in law) are among her family, and she gets angry with him for not yakking a mile a minute with all of them. One one think that the point of this story would be that both learn that they are their own family unit now and need to create their own Christmas traditions, but no. In the end, Jonathan is basically absorbed into his wife's family traditions. I didn't really like Pamela - I found her to be very immature - so this wasn't an ending I particularly enjoyed.

"Let Nothing You Dismay" by Carla Kelly (77 pages) - ⭐⭐⭐
Lord Trevor Chase is a barrister at Lincoln's Inn, considered rather hopeless because he advocates for the street children and rarely wins his cases. He is also known to be suicidal around the holidays, so everyone is rather relieved when he's called to his family home in York because of a family emergency. His brother and sister-in-law, the Marquess and Marchioness of Falstoke, are with their eldest daughter's family, as her children are suffering with measles, so Lord Trevor is basically keeping an eye on the remaining, single children: Lady Janet (18), Lady Lucinda (12), and young David (7). Lady Lucinda is returning home from the Select Academy in Bath, accompanied by a teacher, Cecelia Ambrose. Miss Ambrose's plan is basically to deliver Lady Lucy, have a word with her mother about Lucy and Janet's strained relationship, and return to Bath. Unfortunately, when they arrive and realize Lucy's parents aren't there, Cecelia's plans change. She's actually familiar with Lord Trevor's work in the court system and admires him for it, and is willing to stay on and assist when she realizes that he's rather helpless with his own nieces and nephews. A midnight fire at the manor house forces the group to retreat to the dower house on the properly, and basically they are able to repair their various relationships, etc in the cozy comfort of the smaller building. Janet is getting married in the spring and has basically lost herself in the first blush of love, not realizing how she's alienating her siblings. Her pride is taken down a few notches by both Trevor and Cecelia. David is an adorable little boy who basically hero worships his uncle, and Lucy is a spunky tween caught in a tough part of life. Trevor and Cecelia consider themselves black sheep (Trevor, for pursuing a career when he's the second son and then brother to a marquess; Cecelia, because she's an adopted half-English, half-Egyptian who faces lots of racial hatred in lilly white England) and that they have much in common, and eventually fall in love during their forced proximity.

Generally I love Carla Kelly's stories, but this one was kinda "meh" for me because there's quite a bit of proselytizing (like that's the cure of suicidal holiday thoughts, yick) and there's some additional, weird details that could've been cut with no loss of value (like apparently Trevor lied about the extent of the damage to the manor house to purposely keep everyone in the cramped dower house for....Reasons). In the end, this was a disappointing story for me, and never really brought the end of the collection back to the high standards of the first couple of stories.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
eurohackie | 3 autres critiques | Dec 22, 2022 |
Slapstick, unfunny humour. Paper-thin characters. Metzger is hit and miss, and this one's a miss.
 
Signalé
pamelad | 2 autres critiques | Jul 10, 2022 |
I prefer my regency romances not be narrated by dogs.
 
Signalé
Litrvixen | 1 autre critique | Jun 23, 2022 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
85
Aussi par
5
Membres
3,839
Popularité
#6,602
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
100
ISBN
186
Langues
4
Favoris
5

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