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The Rake's Rainbow

The Rake's Rainbow

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Wonderfully written, even if the hero *is* maddening.
Review: Another Allison Lane winner! The hero takes forever to realize the errors of his misplaced passion (all the way to the next-to-last chapter), but the rest of the story is well worth reading. Caroline's development is well-paced and rather enchanting, the lesser characters interesting, and the anti-heroine rather amazing to watch. Particularly enjoyable is Caroline's level-headedness; she understands that she must become 'her own woman' in many ways, and so comes off as a strong person. And Thomas's turnaround, when it finally comes, is very thorough but also believeable. You'll cheer too!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Wonderfully written, even if the hero *is* maddening.
Review: Another Allison Lane winner! The hero takes forever to realize the errors of his misplaced passion (all the way to the next-to-last chapter), but the rest of the story is well worth reading. Caroline's development is well-paced and rather enchanting, the lesser characters interesting, and the anti-heroine rather amazing to watch. Particularly enjoyable is Caroline's level-headedness; she understands that she must become 'her own woman' in many ways, and so comes off as a strong person. And Thomas's turnaround, when it finally comes, is very thorough but also believeable. You'll cheer too!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Heroine is too good for undeserving hero
Review: Mannering, the novel's supposed hero, is so unappealing and thickheaded that it defies even romance novel logic that are spunky heroine should fall in love with him. Mannering spends the entire novel in love with another woman and treats the loveable heroine, who is his wife, so badly that you actually hope the author kills him so our heroine could find a worthy mate. Not a noteworthy book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Portrait of a disfunctional marriage
Review: My first experience with Allison Lane (The Beleaguered Earl) was a disappointment for the book was so full of flaws that I was reluctant to try again. I am pleased to say that I was very much surprised with The Rake's Rainbow and recommend it highly.

The story of The Hon Thomas Mannering and Miss Caroline Cummings is not an easy read. If you like your regencies lite 'n' fluffy, then this book is not for you. It is dark, distressing and depressing but, ultimately, full of hope and triumph against what seem to be pretty overwhelming odds.

Thomas and Caroline marry in order to escape - for her poverty and governessing and for him in order to gain an inheritance. Thomas had become ensnared by Alicia - a heartless, fickle nymphomaniac who strings him along never intending to marry an earl's mere second son. He slips into a deep depression, drinking and gambling and nearly slipping over the edge into madness.

Caroline is the stronger of the two for, with astute insight into human nature, she is able to save him by letting matters run their course, never giving up hope that the man she sees beneath the hopeless despair is worth nurturing and loving. Some might say she is a bit of a sacrificial lamb but, within the social context of the times, she did what she had to in times when divorce was virtually impossible. The descriptions of her meeting Thomas's family for the first time and finding her way through the Season were excellent for she does it without the support of her husband who, by this time, is so depressed that he ignores her completely.

I liked the way the author developed Thomas's family; each member, particularly his father, the Earl of Marchgate and his foppish but sweet elder brother, had a significant role to play in the development of the story.

There is a great deal of pain, angst and high emotion in this story. Tempers flare, characters sometimes act against their own best intentions and the hero is flawed but honourable. The heroine is strong but tender and loving. Sometimes the reader will want to point a pistol at Thomas and at others will want to love him - for this story is a real emotional roller coaster.

I will read another of Allison Lane's books to see if my first experience was atypical. It's just too bad she did not meet in The Beleaguered Earl the exceptionally high standards that she set with The Rake's Rainbow. It was very well done; polished prose and obvious careful research gives it a very authentic air. Her depiction of the Season, the Ton and marriage and family life in the Regency era were very good and most realistic.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Portrait of a disfunctional marriage
Review: My first experience with Allison Lane (The Beleaguered Earl) was a disappointment for the book was so full of flaws that I was reluctant to try again. I am pleased to say that I was very much surprised with The Rake's Rainbow and recommend it highly.

The story of The Hon Thomas Mannering and Miss Caroline Cummings is not an easy read. If you like your regencies lite 'n' fluffy, then this book is not for you. It is dark, distressing and depressing but, ultimately, full of hope and triumph against what seem to be pretty overwhelming odds.

Thomas and Caroline marry in order to escape - for her poverty and governessing and for him in order to gain an inheritance. Thomas had become ensnared by Alicia - a heartless, fickle nymphomaniac who strings him along never intending to marry an earl's mere second son. He slips into a deep depression, drinking and gambling and nearly slipping over the edge into madness.

Caroline is the stronger of the two for, with astute insight into human nature, she is able to save him by letting matters run their course, never giving up hope that the man she sees beneath the hopeless despair is worth nurturing and loving. Some might say she is a bit of a sacrificial lamb but, within the social context of the times, she did what she had to in times when divorce was virtually impossible. The descriptions of her meeting Thomas's family for the first time and finding her way through the Season were excellent for she does it without the support of her husband who, by this time, is so depressed that he ignores her completely.

I liked the way the author developed Thomas's family; each member, particularly his father, the Earl of Marchgate and his foppish but sweet elder brother, had a significant role to play in the development of the story.

There is a great deal of pain, angst and high emotion in this story. Tempers flare, characters sometimes act against their own best intentions and the hero is flawed but honourable. The heroine is strong but tender and loving. Sometimes the reader will want to point a pistol at Thomas and at others will want to love him - for this story is a real emotional roller coaster.

I will read another of Allison Lane's books to see if my first experience was atypical. It's just too bad she did not meet in The Beleaguered Earl the exceptionally high standards that she set with The Rake's Rainbow. It was very well done; polished prose and obvious careful research gives it a very authentic air. Her depiction of the Season, the Ton and marriage and family life in the Regency era were very good and most realistic.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Decent Book
Review: While I love Allison Lane's work, due to her high quality of writing and her excellent ability to move a story along at a well done pace, I have to agree with an earlier reviewer and say that this book left me ultimately unhappy due to the pure stupidity of the hero. The heroine was a fine character, and while I understand and accept that within the society she lived, she had little choice but to stay married to her husband, I still found the hero so undeserving of her love and affection that it made me want to scream when they finally ended up together happily.

Why then, the four star review? Because, Lane's writing is really just that good and her ability to tell a story is beyond so many other writers of Regency romances. She is able to go beyond the stereotypes that most other such writers use and she does something I find admirable -- she points out the good AND bad in the minor characters. There is something to both like and dislike about many of them. I ended up adoring many of the minor characters and the heroine. While this is something of a over-used plot in Regencies, Lane does her best to make it refreshing and interesting. Truly, she's one of the three romance writers that I ever pick up without questioning the fact that I will get a decent read.

I would highly suggest this book and Lane's other books, but, at least for this one, I would not recommend that you expect to much of the main male character.


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