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The Lily Brand
Sandra Schwab
2005, European Historical Romance (Regency England and France)
Leisure, $5.99, 310 pages, Amazon ASIN 084395552X
| Grade: |
B |
| Sensuality: |
Warm |
Lovers of dark and emotional romance, take note: there is a new author
to check out! The Lily Brand, Sandra Schwab's debut novel, is
an historical romance set just after the Napoleonic Wars. As I read the overwhelmingly dark opening of this novel, I was taken aback by the relentless evil in this story, but the stark novel soon drew me in and I enjoyed a most unusual read.
Lillian lives in France as the virtual prisoner of her debauched
stepmother Camille. As the novel opens, Camille has taken Lillian to a
prison to purchase a man who will essentially be used as a plaything. The
brutal Camille has her own virtual army of male slaves at home, but she has
decided to initiate the gentle and fearful Lillian into her way of life.
The man chosen to be Lillian's is taken home and humiliated at the
hands of Camille. Though Lillian has some compassion for him, she fears
Camille and so goes along with at least some of Camille's sadistic
requirements. The scenes between Lillian, a prisoner of sorts herself, and her intended plaything are some of the most wrenching I have recently read. Eventually, an opportunity presents itself for Lillian to escape her stepmother and she flees to England to live with her grandfather.
In England Lillian is presented to Society. There she meets Troy, a
cousin of her suitor, and recently returned from France. To her horror,
Lillian realizes that she has come face to face with her former prisoner.
Even worse, he recognizes her and identifies her with the brutal treatment
meted out by Camille. Since he thinks her complicit in Camille's actions,
he sees Lillian as evil also. The ensuing relationship between Lillian and
Troy is fraught with emotion as their attraction becomes tangled up with
Troy's attempts to recover from his treatment in France and his memories of
Lillian as his tormentor.
For those who like to read of tortured heroes, poor Troy has certainly
been to hell and back. He carries forever the scars of his time in France
and these mark his life with Lillian from the moment he meets her in
England. Though at times the drama in this story strained my ability to
suspend disbelief and I found myself wishing the author would show more
of what the ordeal in France had done to Lillian, I also found myself turning
the pages compulsively. I kept hoping for Lillian and Troy to find their
happy ending even as it became apparent that they would really have to work
hard for it.
A word about the sensuality rating is in order here as well. The book is
rated Warm since there are few explicit scenes. However, readers should
note that while Schwab's writing is not always explicit, she fills much of
the story with a level of erotic tension that often makes the story seem
hotter than your average Warm read.
The secondary characters in this tale are not comic, but they do provide
a bit of light when the darkness of the story threatens to overwhelm. My
only problem with the introduction of characters in the second half of the
book is that this half of the book is not paced quite so well as the first, making the ending seem a little rushed. Still, the characters and their
plight drew me in from the beginning and I found The Lily Brand to be
a rather addictive read.
-- Lynn Spencer
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