I discovered two new favorite authors in 2025. In this installment we have two more novels by one of them. One is what I consider a more "serious" novel, and the other a comedy.
Beginning last week and going forward for now, I'm going to include two books in all my Saturday Morning Posts, and not publish an extra Sunday edition. I'm slowly catching up to my reading, though I am still a month plus behind. However, I like a bit of a backstock of reviews to post, and while I read a lot of books in 2025, I doubt my 2026 reading pace will, as I mentioned in my last post.
My reviewer criteria. I like light, entertaining novels. I like smaller scale stories rather than epics. I like character focused novels featuring pleasant characters, with a minimum number of unpleasant ones. I greatly value clever and witty writing. I like first person, or close third person narratives. I dislike a lot of "head jumping" between POVs and flashbacks. I want a story, not a puzzle. While I am not opposed to violence, I dislike gore for the sake of gore. I find long and elaborate fight, action, and battle sequences tedious. Plot holes and things that happen for the convenience of the author annoy me. And I fear I'm a born critic in that I don't mind pointing out what I don't like in a story. However, I lay no claim to be the final arbitrator of style and taste, you need to decide for yourself what you like or dislike in a book.
Your opinions are always welcome. Comment below.
A Civil Contract by Georgette Heyer B
This is the more serious novel. It is not gloomy, but is content to tell the story of the first year of a marriage of convivence as a quiet drama rather than a rambunctious comedy. It has the usual cast of original and lovingly drawn characters, steeped in the authentic society and norms of the age, 1814.
The story has our male protagonist arriving back in England on leave from the Army fighting the French in the Peninsular campaign in Portugal due to the sudden death of this father. He finds that his father spent more money than he had coming in, and almost the entire estate will have to be sold off to settle his father's debts, including the ancient family home. Moreover, now reduced near poverty (in the eyes of the upper classes) he is now honor bound to give up his true love, being no longer an eligible prospect. He does so voluntarily, saving her father from having to deny him his daughter's hand in marriage. He is further told that in order to save the family estate, he needs to not only sacrifice his love, but he must marry a wealthy heiress. His now-ex-lover's father knows a wealthy businessman in the City who has a very plain, but down-to-earth daughter that he promised his late wife that he would find a nobleman for her to marry. And as the title suggest, he does his duty, and the daughter does hers as well by agreeing to be his wife, knowing that he loved another.
The wife is determined to make her husband comfortable, and he to do right by her, despite still loving the girl he had to abandon. He also has to contend with the fact that his wife's father is not only very rich, but very generous and spoils his daughter, showering both her and him with expensive gifts, such that he has to push back against his father-in-law fearful that he'll be seen as dependent on his father-in-law for money when he wants to prove his competency at managing the affairs of his estate.
I enjoyed this novel. While not my favorite, is was always interesting, with colorful characters, especially the father of the bride.
Cotillion by Georgette Heyer A
(Cotillion; an elaborate dance with many changes of partners.)
Freddie. What is it with Freddies that they are always pleasant idiots? Think of Freddie Treepwood. If you know, you know. Well in this story we have Freddy Standen, a character very much in the Freddy/Freddie mold, a pleasant idle, young fashionably dressed man about town, who is, like Bertie Wooster, is kindhearted and always willing to help a friend or any damsel in distress... And who, unlike Bertie, somehow manages to pull it off all by himself, often to the amazement of everyone who knows him.
The premise of this story is that the adopted daughter of a rich cranky old man has summoned his four great nephews to his house. As they suspect, he tells them that he will leave all his money to this adopted daughter, Kitty, but only if she marries one of the nephews. If not it all goes to charity. Two of them have arrived when the story opens, a third, Jack, the roguish one Kitty loves, declines to play the game and stays away. And the fourth, our Freddy is sort of on the way there because Jack told he should go. He stops at an inn to eat dinner, knowing how meager his uncle's table would be. Kitty, after rejecting the offers of marriage from two of the nephews, runs away, only to come upon Freddy at the inn. She devises a plan to get to London in order to get to he true love, Jack. While she does not tell Freddie her plan, she says that she has to get away from the bleak house of her Uncle, and suggests that this can only be accomplished if Freddy proposes to her and she accepts. Freddy doesn't need his uncle's money and has no desire to marry her, or anyone else. But she says it's only for a month, and they will break up by the end of it (once she meets Jack) Being kind hearted, he gets talked to it and takes her down to London as his fiancée, to meet his family telling no one of non-real nature of their engagement. Still, he takes on the responsibility of guiding her safely into London society, and wearing the right clothes.
This is one of Heyer's comedies, and the best so far. It is like a fuller, more rounded and grounded Wodehouse novel set in Regency England instead of the 1920's England that Wodehouse sets his stories in. Freddy, is very much a slightly more competent (in his limited social sphere) Bertie Wooster, with his language laced with Regency slang and his one passion being clothes. Once again you have a great variety of interesting characters and a richly sketched London scene of that era, in clothes, social norms, and the life of the wealthy ton.
Having read more than a dozen Heyer novels now, I'm used to a lot of the, what I have to assume authentic, slang she has her characters spouting, but if you're not familiar with it, it might prove a little daunting until you get used to it. But otherwise, there are many witty observations, and whenever Freddy is on the page, hilarious conversations. If you enjoy Wodehouse, I think you will really enjoy this story as well. It starts in the middle of a gathering that the reader knows nothing about, so it is a bit confusing, but stay the course. Freddy arrives and story takes off.








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