A Princess of Thule by
William Black
My rating:
3 of 5 stars
Parts of this I liked. But some of it was a drag. I have thoughts.
I keep looking for new-to me authors of 19th century historical romances to like, especially ones that make me think of Sir Walter Scott or Alexandre Dumas. I've found a few: William Harrison Ainsworth; Edward Bulwer Lytton; Lew Wallace; Louise Muhlbach; Robert Louis Stevenson (sometimes); and George Sand, sometimes. I hoped William Black would be like that, and he may be, but I wasn't excited by this first taste.
For me, the problem was how it broke into three very different novels. (Pure spoilers ahead) The first part, our MC, Lavender, is enjoying a visit to the island of Lewis and Harris (just one island) in the Hebrides, getting shown around by his friend who has been there before. Their host, MacKenzie, has a beautiful, intelligent, friendly, capable daughter, Sheila, who Lavender falls in love with. For a third of the book, he is enjoying his visit there, hunting or fishing in the day, visiting and eating and singing at night, getting to know Sheila. He's a great guy, too, and very considerate.
Then he marries her, they go back to London, and he turns into an asshole. Holy crap. He's embarrassed by her accent, and insists she do none of the things she used to do in her life on the island, and leaves her at home to go visit with people, including a woman and her beautiful daughter. He keeps making her promise not to do almost anything that pleases her, like going down the the docks to see the ships or anything independent. When a serving girl visits from the island, he refuses to let her sit at dinner with some guests he has brought. So she leaves him.
I hated this whole section. He was nothing like the character of the first third. Inconsiderate, selfish, rude, lazy--it was weird.
(His rich aunt dies, leaving her money to his friend because he won't take her money. His wife has been trying to get him to do something with his life, live on his own skills, and he finally decides to try.)
The last third is Lavender traveling in Scotland, trying to make his way with painting, which he is very good at. He realizes he's been a horrible jerk, and he's trying to become the person his wife thought he would be. This is a a fun part of the book. This should have been most of the book; all the rest should have been visited in flashbacks or something. They at last reunite and come up with an arrangement that works, including living half the time near her father on the island.
This book was just about good enough for me to try a second by the author. I'm on the fence about that. I'd need a better copy; the edition I read this out of has the absolute smallest font and most words/page I've ever seen. I could only read it outdoors in natural light. LOL
Several other readers gave this a 5. I don't agree with them, but you might. Tepidly recommended.
View all my reviews