Reviews

The Beautiful Stranger by Julia London

bettybumpkins's review

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challenging emotional

3.5

Rather enjoyed this one, especially Philip's role in helping his friend.  

seraphina's review against another edition

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4.0

This book is absolutely breathtakingly a wonderful book and you can't help but fall in love with the characters.

thenia's review against another edition

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3.0

A story comprised of many different parts, some of which I liked a lot and some of which not all that much.

Arthur and Kerry make a great couple, despite their many differences and the various obstacles on their way.

They have quite a few adventures together, from being lost in the woods, to experiencing life in each other's world, facing a death sentence and finally finding a place where they can just be together.

The epilogue was especially sweet, showing us the three friends together after many years, reminiscing with their beautiful families surrounding them.



The last book of the series, [b:The Secret Lover|495048|The Secret Lover (Rogues of Regent Street, # 4)|Julia London|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1175218351s/495048.jpg|483205] is about Julian's scandalous sister Sophie Dane's story.

georgiewhoissarahdrew's review

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2.0

2.5 stars
There's some good stuff going on in this - the hero learning to love life, good background on the Highland Clearances, financial disaster looming for the heroine, love-across-the-tracks. All this and a murder trial too.

The story is well-laid out in the first part of the book - Arthur's sense of guilt at a friend's death driving him to sort out a Scottish creditor, Kerry trying to raise funds to make a future for herself and her clan family. Their meeting and gradual relationship unfolded gently and with a certain amount of humour. I don't know that I was particularly convinced by the relationship, though - Arthur seemed a little too self-absorbed to have fallen for dewy-eyed simplicity, no matter how loyal Kerry was to her family. However.

What let the second half down, ironically, is the sheer quantity of plot lines that were juggled - generally to the detriment of a realistic exploration of any. The financial plotline becomes overly complex - and then is, probably to everyone's relief, abandoned in favour of a more straightforward Sir Jasper de Vil type plot. So a bit of a tonal change there. More dramatically (yes, more dramatically,
Kerry kills a man in self-defence, and, without stopping to cover her position, runs away to England with Arthur. Instead of exploring the effects of the killing on Kerry, the story decides to veer off to explore how difficult she finds life in England, clothes, bitchy comments etc etc. The killing is side-lined. Arthur, during this English phase, comes across as an insensitive clod, unwilling to marry Kerry, or leave her alone. When, finally, she returns to Scotland, he dillies and dallies before following her
.

The climax of the story is a trial scene, in which both prosecution and defence trample over the niceties of legal procedure big time. Yes, we know (because an HEA is guaranteed) that it's going to work out OK - but that doesn't mean that the reality of how the law works can be completely dismissed just to engineer the ending. Wouldn't it be far more effective to have the H&H struggling to comply with legal verities and triumphing, than magicking them aside?

Overall, there was just too much going on for me (and not enough of it plausible), so the book was unsatisfactory as a result.
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