From Eloisa James's "READING ROMANCE" column on The Barnes & Noble Review
I write
about dukes. If one of my heroes was around today, he'd be wearing a Rolex,
using imported dental floss, and instructing his driver to drop by Tiffany's.
In short, I'm a hopeless snob, at least when it comes to fantasy. According to
recent news stories, I'm not alone; apparently American girls are stalking
British bars hoping to snag Prince Harry. It could be said that as a country,
we have a fascination with the wealthy titled class. However, four terrific
romances just convinced me that every author doesn't think a coronet is the equivalent
of a halo. In these novels, characters do not draw their appeal from their
other-worldliness, their dissimilarity from you and me, but from their
down-to-earth normality.
Eileen Dreyer's Never
a Gentleman looks squarely at the problem I lay out above. If
we Americans think that high birth is sexy, what do we think of the middle
class? Are regular people sexy? What
if -- as in the premise of Dreyer's book -- a gentleman is forced to marry a plain
soldier's daughter with callused hands and no knowledge of the ton? And what if his physical beauty
matches his birth and wealth? Diccan Hilliard is appalled when he ends up
married to an awkward, aging virgin. But Grace Fairchild is an utterly
fascinating heroine: honest, strong, forthright, and deeply loving. Even when
Diccan breaks her heart (in one of the most wrenching scenes of betrayal I've
ever read), she doesn't run away. Grace astonished me, and she constantly did
the same for Diccan. You'll find yourself rooting for Diccan to escape his
"prison of perfection," as he labels it, and become Grace's lover,
rather than just her husband.
Jodi Thomas's Texas Blue is also a historical, set in 1875, but being a western, it has no truck with titles. Even so, the novel circles around notions of class and hierarchy. Lewton Paterson is a gambling man whose lifelong dream is to marry "up," which in this case means finds his way into middle-class respectability. So he scrams a ride to Texas, and sets out to seduce his way into the McMurray ranching family. Lewton is the ultimate anti-hero: "in twenty-eight years he'd seen nothing worth risking his life for, nothing he loved worth dying to protect…life was a game and the man leaving the table with the most chips won." As it turns out, his targeted bride, Emily McMurray, is determined never to marry, so when Lewton arrives on his courting mission, he actually meets her friend Tamela disguised as Emily. Lewton hires the real Emily (for $5/hour) to teach him about ranching, and finds himself falling for a girl who cannot give him the respectable life he wants so badly -- or so he thinks. Texas Blue is a story of a very dear, big-hearted if bumbling, gambler and an exasperated woman who reluctantly teaches him all about ranching and falls in love at the same time. You'll finish this book with a big sigh. Lewton is brave, handsome, hairy (to Emily's mind) -- anything but a gentleman, but as he says in the end, he's also the "luckiest man alive."
As a romance writer, it's
a bit hard to write about Nora Roberts.
How can someone as prolific as Nora (as with royalty, a single name suffices)
write one of the best novels I read all month? It doesn't seem fair! Chasing
Fire is a terrific romance, one of her very best, in my
opinion. Nora's heroine, Rowan Tripp, is the kind of firefighter who leaps out
of a plane to put out forest wildfires. When she's not chasing fires, she
trains the rookies -- one of whom is Gulliver Curry. This novel takes the question
of class and compounds it: Rowan is, practically speaking, Gulliver's boss. And
as she tells him, she doesn't hook up with "rookies, snookies or other
smoke jumpers." Nora doesn't always choose to write heart-pounding books
about gritty, brave characters (her bridal books feature charming, rich
characters). But there is no one who does rough-and-tumble suspense better than
she does. Rowan is the kind of woman who can hold her own with
high-testosterone firefighters: she can knock a man on his ass, knock back six
shots of tequila, and turn down the sexiest man on the team because, as she says,
"once you mix sex into it, even smart people can get stupid." Gull is
a match for her, though: persistent, charming, and downright heroic once it
becomes clear that a murderer lurks in the ranks of the smoke jumpers. I
challenge you not to stay up late reading Chasing
Fire: it kept me turning pages until 3 AM.
Jill Sorenson's The
Edge of Night takes class and compounds it with race. April Ortiz
is a Hispanic single mom who works at a strip joint and lives in Chula Vista, a
city near San Diego that is exploding with heat and poverty. Noah Young is a
white officer assigned to a patrol car in Chula Vista. He's not an undercover
FBI agent, demon hunter or werewolf; she isn't an heiress in disguise. They are
exactly what they appear to be: hard-working, struggling, regular people. The Edge of Night is an absolutely
riveting depiction of life in Chula Vista. I loved this novel -- the heat of the
city, the pure decency of Noah and April, the slow way they came together and
fell in love in the face of their differences. There is nothing ducal about
Noah. But Sorenson taught me to love a man who mutters "screw it,"
and then gets up his courage to fall on his knees and pull a black velvet box
from his pocket. There aren't any Rolexes or limousines in this novel -- unless they
belong to drug dealers -- but there's a flash-fire kind of love and passion that
is pure romance.
Of course, there's a place
for fantasy in the romance genre -- whether the fantastic element involves vampire
teeth or a gilded carriage. But we should always keep a corner of our bookcase
for novels like these: ones that reaffirm that romance isn't confined to the
landed gentry, and that money doesn't make people happy -- love does. When Rowan
and Gull are running through a fire and she thinks about his eyes -- "Eyes
that didn't lie…Eyes she could trust" -- it strips glittering decoration from
the genre and speaks to its heart. In the end, we all want someone to love,
someone to trust. These novels speak to the joy of finding it, no matter what
your race, gender, or class may be.