Sylvester - Georgette Heyer

Sylvester

By Georgette Heyer

  • Release Date: 2011-04-01
  • Genre: Historical Romance
Score: 4.5
4.5
From 73 Ratings

Description

"Reading Georgette Heyer is the next best thing to reading Jane Austen."—Publishers Weekly

Rank, wealth, and elegance are no match for a young lady who writes novels...

Sylvester, Duke of Salford, has exacting requirements for a bride. Then he meets Phoebe Marlow, a young lady with literary aspirations, and suddenly life becomes very complicated. She meets none of his criteria, and even worse, she has written a novel that is sweeping through the ton and causing all kinds of gossip... and he's the main character!

What Readers Say:

"A truly brilliant Heyer with an adorable and very real heroine and a hero who is very human!"

"One of Heyer's most unsung achievements, a classic Pride and Prejudice story. Hilarity and adventure throughout."

"The hero may be my all-time favorite. He is so drily funny it takes your breath away. What a wonderful love story."

"Hilariously funny, romantic, even touching in a subtle way."

Georgette Heyer wrote over fifty novels, including Regency romances, mysteries, and historical fiction. She was known as the Queen of Regency romance, and was legendary for her research, historical accuracy, and her extraordinary plots and characterizations.

Reviews

  • Shades of Pride & Prejudice, now with more humour!

    5
    By Marina Ariadne
    Not a direct correlation, but the ups and downs, the ebbs and flows, the delight and the humiliation, and the character development show as strongly in Sylvester as in P&P. Two of Heyer’s best blithering nincompoops are found herein. This is a rare example of Heyer’s narrative not referring to male characters solely/primarily by their family style or title. Unfortunately to my eyes, a great too many 21st C. Regency romance, Regency-lite, and Regency-historical novelists choose to follow this template than Heyer’s other Georgians and Regencies, or Austen’s own in-period novels. Sylvester is so very much a traditional comedy of manners. I think Ms Heyer/Mrs Rougier was still alive when I first read this. It remains one of my favorites of hers.

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