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Cargando... El orgullo del pavo real (1976)por Victoria Holt
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Romance I have been reading Victoria Holt books all my life, so when I needed a “goto” I reached for this one. Her Australia settings have not been among my favorites, and as I got deeper into this one, I saw how it had not withstood the test of time. i grew impatient with the heroine, and the stuck-up hero, playing games instead of talking to one another. “And if he hadn't gone to the trouble of making me jealous, I never would have realized how much I loved him.” Run, Jessica. Run as far from this self absorbed man as you can.” My rating is an attempt at objectivity. Objectively speaking, this is a very well-written romantic suspense, heavy on the romance. I believe it to be everything that was beloved of romances in the 60's and 70's. It was very well plotted and a great deal of care was taken with both atmosphere and characterisations. Thus ends objectivity. I disliked this book. It is the embodiment of everything I find tedious in romances, in spite of wanting to enjoy them. The whole misunderstanding / lack of communication trope makes me want to set fire to the book as I'm reading it. It would take an emotionally neglected and abused protagonist to find the romantic interest in this book romantic or heroic in the least. He was vain, arrogant and stupid. She was just stupid, although I give her credit for being a smart-ass. The setting for the first half of the book was England, and the second half in an Australian opal mining town, during a time before combustion engines and electricity were a thing (no specific date is ever named in the book). I thought at first this would be a saving grace, because I'm moderately interested in opals. But Holt was apparently obsessed with them, and her characters were mad about them. There was so much obsessing and evangelising about the damn opals. Holt was too heavy handed and went too far; by the end she'd almost killed any interest I had in them at the start. A true connoisseur of the romance genre might enjoy this for the nostalgia if not for the good story behind it (and it is a good story). Me, I'm going back to my wheelhouse of murder and mayhem for awhile, before getting back up on this genre-horse. There are slow burn books and then there is this one where nothing of importance happens for a good 70 percent of the book and then you just have an ineffectual heroine through most of the story who somehow saves herself in the end by talking. Definitely not one of Holt's best. With a hero that I was rooting against and then the setting moving to Australia, this book just had too much that in the end didn't work for it. "The Pride of the Peacock" follows Opal Jessica Clavering (known as Jessica) as she slowly unravels her personal history when one of her neighbors she has been forbidden to talk to, Ben Henniker who somehow ended up purchasing her family's ancestral home and land leaving her family living in a small home and much impoverished. When Ben pressures Jessica into marrying his son in order for her to restore her family's home to them and also give him grandchildren, she agrees to the deal though she doesn't care for Josslyn Madden (otherwise known as Peacock or Joss by Jessica). Jessica is self-absorbed I thought. She finds out that Ben had a connection to her family and to someone else in her family that she never knew about. He seems obsessed with Jessica and Jessica just goes, well Ben loves me. I don't know. It was vaguely creepy to me. Also the way that Jessica talks to her mother I can't see happening and things going well for her. This book is supposed to take place in the 1800s and the way that Jessica acts at times is too modern. I did like how she stood up for her sister and pushed her brother to marry though. I didn't like Jessica's relationship with Joss at all. He taunts her and keeps pushing her for things she doesn't want to give and frankly I don't blame her. There is nothing redeeming about his character in this book. Honestly, I didn't much care for any man that is discussed in this book. As I already said, Ben is creepy and obsessed and I loathed how he ends up in the end forcing Jessica to go along with his determination to see her married to Joss. Joss is a philandering ass and treats Jessica terribly through most of the book until he doesn't. I think we are supposed to see him a changed man, but I didn't. The other characters we meet when Jessica and Joss get to Australia feel very one dimensional. The plot was not that great. We hear about the Green Flash opal being stolen from Ben decades earlier, and then find out it wasn't stolen, but then it gets stolen again. And of course there's a supposed curse linked to the opal. We do eventually get a murder but it was very confusing when you find out the why behind it. It didn't help that the villain reveal was so anti-climatic and didn't make a lot of sense (at least to me). The writing was so-so. Some things I wish had been discussed more and not glossed over. I know this book is written in the Victorian era, I have a really hard time with the fact that both Jessica and Joss are "bastards" and nothing was said by the community at large about it. I guess in Australia (where the story moves) it didn't really matter, but I am shocked that no one said anything in the area where Jessica was born. Especially since people had to know about it. I thought the whole book was so repetitive after a while though. We had to hear about opals, peacocks, and the Green Flash throughout. The setting of this book I thought should have been a later period in time. I also didn't feel like the book had enough of the Gothic elements that I enjoy. I mean we had a murder, and I guess a curse with that stupid opal, and even some madness in the end. I just wish that the love/romance side had been better and we had actually had a haunted home or something else. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Contenido enVictoria Holt Lot of 8: On the Night of the Seventh Moon / My Enemy the Queen / The Devil on Horseback / The Curse of the Kings / The Spring of the Tiger / The Landowner Legacy / Lord of the Far Island / The Pride of the Peacock por Victoria Holt Judas Kiss, My Enemy the Queen, Curse of the Kings, Bride of Pendorric, Menfreya, House of a Thousand Lanterns, Spring of the Tiger, Pride of the Peacock, Kirkland Revels, Lord of the he Far Island, Mask of the Enchantress, Secret Woman, Night of the Seventh Moon, Black Opal, Time of the Hunters Moon, Landowner Legacy, Captive #, Secrets of a Nightingale, Silk Vendetta, Road to Paradise Island, India Fan #, Queen of Confession, King of the Castle, Demon Lover, Shadow of the Lynx, Crimson Falcon, Mistress of por Victoria Holt Aparece abreviada enReader's Digest: The Pride of the Peacock / The Devil's Alternative / Friends and Friendly Beasts / Earthsound por Reader's Digest Reader's Digest Condensed Books: Vets Might Fly • The Pride of the Peacock • The Horsemen • Daylight Must Come por Reader's Digest
Fantasy.
Fiction.
Romance.
Historical Fiction.
HTML:A young woman uncovers her family's dark secrets in this mystery and her connection to a famously cursed gemstone in this Victorian gothic thriller from an internationally bestselling author To secure her inheritance, Jessica Clavering agrees to a marriage of convenience, but will her handsome new husband's desire for her ever surpass his obsession with a famously cursed opal? Raised in the shadow of her family's financial ruin, Jessica has never felt as though she fit in. When her only friend, an elderly neighbor, offers her the chance at a new life, she's eager to take it. His only condition: she must marry her son, Joss. The newlyweds inherit a fabled opal mine in Australia. It's only once they arrive on the faraway continent that Jessica starts to uncover her family's dark past and her connection to the Green Flash, an exquisite and spellbinding opal. The stone arouses a dangerous desire in anyone who sees it-even her husband. Blending historical romance with elements of the paranormal, The Pride of the Peacock is an exhilarating tale from the Queen of Gothic Romance. Fans of Susanna Kearsley, Daphne Du Maurier, and Kate Morton will be spellbound by classic story of an overseas voyage, a cursed opal, and forbidden desire. Other Titles from Victoria Holt "The heroine is adventurous, the hero is brooding, and the twists and turns of the story are unexpected, culminating in a surprise but satisfying ending." "It's suspenseful, full of relationship tales, uplifting, and I had a hard time putting it down!" "I couldn't put it down. The twist at the end is surprising and reminiscent of Agatha Christie's style. Definitely a classic." "One of Holt's best books." "I loved this book. I have read it over and over again-along with every novel ever written by Victoria Holt!" What reviewers are saying about The Pride of the Peacock"The mysteries drew me in and kept me guessing right up to the end..."-The Good, the Bad, and the Unread "This is just story telling at its finest."-Romancing the Book What everyone is saying about the Queen of Gothic Romance Victoria Holt"Victoria Holt's writing is captivating"-Bookfoolery "She spins history with romance and intrigue and always leaves me wanting more." "Holt's stories are spell binding....page turners." "I love her books! I have read all of them again and again. She is a wonderful storyteller." "One of the supreme writers of gothic romance, a compelling storyteller whose gripping novelshave thrilled millions."-RT Book Reviews .No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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