Afbeelding auteur

Jeannelle M. Ferreira

Auteur van The Covert Captain: Or, A Marriage of Equals

5+ Werken 54 Leden 2 Besprekingen Favoriet van 1 leden

Over de Auteur

Bevat de naam: Jeannelle Ferreira

Werken van Jeannelle M. Ferreira

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Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
1981-03-26
Geslacht
female

Leden

Besprekingen

I wanted to love this novella, and I fully expected that I would for about half of the book. Regency-era lesbian fiction? SIGN ME UP!

The first half of the book is the half that I enjoyed, and if I had rated only that half, I probably would have ended up wavering between three and four stars. But then the second half of the book happened, and I was left completely disappointed.

What bothered me the most was Harry's casual antisemitism. It literally stopped me in my tracks, and I reread the pages once more to make sure that I hadn't misread anything. I hadn't. And now there shall be a rant.

Look, I know that antisemitism was a "thing" in history; hell, it's still a thing today. I'd be a moron if I sat here and tried to do anything except acknowledge the facts. I'm not even going to argue that there is no place for it in historical fiction or historical romances (for example, even though I didn't like the book itself, I did enjoy that the author of "The Admiral's Penniless Bride" brought up antisemitism in a historical romance - but the difference was, the two leads were NOT antisemitic).

In my opinion, there is absolutely NO place for antisemitism in a LEAD CHARACTER in a historical romance unless there is a HUGE shift somewhere along the way in their thinking. Even then, it'd have to be a monumental change, one that made my jaw drop open and think, "okay, wow, this character definitely had an incredible change of heart! I am now cool with this character, because s/he had such growth and understands her/his previous ways of thinking were wrong and unacceptable and is making efforts to counteract the harm that happened prior to her/his change of heart." And we didn't get that from Harry. Her antisemitism remained unchallenged while it happened and unaddressed in the rest of the book.

No. That does not work for me at all.

What bothers me the most is that I googled the author, and she identifies as Jewish. I cannot speak for her motivations and don't presume to, but I cannot understand, for the life of me, why she would make one of the leads in a romance antisemitic. As a Jewish woman myself, it was like a giant slap in the face to read that, and yet another slap was delivered when I got to the end of the book and no one called Harry out for it. How am I supposed to like a racist, bigoted character, even if it is "true to the times," in a ROMANCE of all things? I can't.

Even worse, there was really NO PURPOSE to showcase Harriet's antisemitism. It didn't add anything to the story. It didn't serve to draw attention to societal ills. It was just like dropping a rock into a very still pond and then ignoring the ripples.

I found myself wishing that Nathaniel/Nora would run far and wide from Harry instead, and that kind of ruined everything for me.

(Actually, I started out rating this book as two stars, but as I ranted about the antisemitism, I realized that I wouldn't recommend this book to anyone, and so I dropped it down to one star because it makes me so mad.)

That said...

The writing style is very dry. This can be common in Regency-era romances (especially when authors are trying to make them sound more authentic), but I don't care for it. It was difficult to get attached to either of the characters because it felt like the writing style was rather standoffish (this helped later when we got that rude little surprise from Harry, I guess).

Even ignoring the antisemitism from one of the heroines, I didn't care for the second half of the book anyway. It felt like the author wasn't sure where to go with the story after Nathaniel/Nora proposed and just threw in several fillers that meant nothing to the actual story (the hanging of one of the former men in Nathaniel/Nora's regiment felt particularly misplaced; I wasn't sure why it was included, except to just take up some pages). I also found it EXTREMELY weird that Sherry (Harry's brother and Nathaniel/Nora's best friend/former commander) found Harry in Nathaniel/Nora's boarding house at the crack of dawn and barely remarked upon it. Umm...that was a BIG DEAL, and considering that Sherry was portrayed as a very protective brother in the rest of the book, his lack of comment was...very strange. Reputation was everything in this era, and by finding his sister in Nathaniel/Nora's company at that time of day, Harry's was just ruined - and Sherry has nothing to say about it at all?.

I liked the character of Nathaniel/Nora, and I found myself wishing that she would find a better love interest (preferably one who wasn't antisemitic, thanks).

Meh. This novella was a great disappointment to me.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
schatzi | 1 andere bespreking | Sep 22, 2019 |
An amazing concept that was executed with painstaking attention to detail and a great deal of heart. Our captain ran off with her brother's boots at 19 to join the regiment & is finally home from the Napoleonic wars. At loose (and PTSD-tinged) ends, she ends up at the house of her best friend & major, & quickly starts to fall for his sister. Gradually, you find things out about each woman--their hard-fought battles, both internal and external--and each revelation makes their happy ending more fraught & more earned. The conclusion was so rushed and abrupt though! There was the usual third act crisis point where everything falls apart (as it does in the romance genre) and boy howdy, this book had me worried we were just going to end unhappily, considering how little of the falling action is actually dedicated to getting to the HEA.… (meer)
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Gemarkeerd
epaulettes | 1 andere bespreking | Jan 3, 2019 |

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Statistieken

Werken
5
Ook door
8
Leden
54
Populariteit
#299,230
Waardering
4.0
Besprekingen
2
ISBNs
7
Favoriet
1

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