This is a classic from 1981
set in 1788 and the years following in France (mostly) on the dawn of the
Revolution. It’s also a bodice ripper of sorts. Angelique Dubois was too blonde
and too aristocratic to be the daughter of her peasant father and everyone in
their small village knew it, including Angelique whose mother told her she was
the daughter of a gentleman. But her mother did not tell her she was the
granddaughter of the Duc de Rhoulac.
When she was 18 and working in the
fields with her half brother, Englishman Sir Richard Lansing, visiting the
duke, rode hard through the fields chasing a stag and shoved Angelique’s
brother to the ground. A short while later, Angelique’s brother was dead. Seeking
revenge, her father attacks one of the duke’s relatives and ends up being
hanged for his crime. Her mother was so dazed with grief she was never again
herself.
Forced to seek employment, Angelique
runs to Paris and there encounters the man she detests. She wants justice but
does something very stupid and ends up raped by Lansing, though under circumstances
that might exonerate him somewhat.
Angelique goes through many adventures,
not all of them pleasant, but all is not lost for she is still a duke’s granddaughter.
But she will make another stupid decision that sees her forced to marry Lansing
and move to England.
Meanwhile, she has the memory of a kind
man, Jacques Latour, who was all that Angelique admired—courageous, idealistic
and unselfish. Though she did not share his passion, she willingly she gave
herself to this gallant revolutionary. But that was before Lansing…
Jason has obviously done her historical
homework. The story is rich in details of the time and you do get a sense for
what the people of France, ordinary people as well as the nobility, lived
through. I recommend it, particularly if you are interested in the period.
Buy used in paper on Amazon.
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