
I took part in a small bookclub last month and the book of the month was Regency Buck
I read portions of it outloud to Jonathan. To mock it.
If I ever refer to any of you as Clorinda you should not take that as a compliment.
It read to me like a book Anne Shirley would have written and Gilbert Blythe would have mocked.
Then I went to book club and was actually convinced in the historical value of the book. I was persuaded to believe that Georgette Heyer knows regency romance like none other and that I had sneered too soon and in vain. (But I still don't like the fact that it's a romance and reads as such.)
Georgette Heyer is not goin' down as my favorite authoress but I am kinda glad I read it. (There. I said it!)
In this story, Regency Buck
That said, I do find it historically interesting. Apparently Heyer was thought to know everything that there was to know about Regency England and with a handful of exceptions, all of the side characters in this story were real people. The places that she mentions in the book actually exist and the customs and manners of the time are spot on. From the perspective of learning more about how the upper class society lived in the early 1800's, this book definitely piqued my interest. Apparently too, this is the first of Heyer's books based in the Regency time period and "essentially established the genre of Regency Romance." (That is according to my sources.) That said, I'll leave it to decide for yourself whether Heyer did the literary world any favors.
I am not a fan. This is not a scholarly review. This is merely a record of my love/hate impressions. It was curious from a historical perspective and absolutely loathsome in others. Since I'm known to not like romances, I would hastily make note of the fact that this book was first published in 1935 and therefore the book isn't racy as far as romances go. The cover art that you see above makes the reader assume there is more hanky-panky going on than you will actually discover between the pages.
Heyer is harsher than Jane Austen. The dialogue between her characters is more biting and cold. I had a hard time with the spirit of the dialogue that existed between key characters and wondered how on earth they could ever come to like each other. It was all so very off-putting to me.
All of that said, the point of book clubs is to read and discuss things you might not otherwise read or think about on your own. I certainly would not have picked this up for myself but I did learn quite a bit about the Regency time period and Georgette Heyer and I'm grateful for that. Even if it's just to know that I can safely avoid any additional books by her in the future. Purpose served! (Well, that and I did have a really good time with the ladies discussing the book. Which was the point, for me, in the first place!)