The
Villainous Viscount Or The Curse Of The Venns
by
Lucinda Elliot
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GENRE:
Historical Gothic Spoof, Historical Regency
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BLURB: An
appreciative satire of the cliches of classical Gothic, with the
eponymous Villainus Viscount, a haunted castle, a family curse, and a
spirited heroine.
When
Clarinda Greendale inherits the fortune of disreputable uncle she
hardly knows, she does not expect to find herself forced into
marriage with an aristocratic fortune hunter and wild, brawling,
debauched social outcast. Not only that, but her name featured some
way down on the list of eligible heiresses he planned to court.
Still,Clarinda has always found Harley Venn set off the most
unmaidenly tinglings in her; that is one consolation...
Yet
neither did Clarinda expect to inherit the legacy of a wrongdoing
from half a century before. For the wicked if beguiling Lord Venn
seems to have inherited a family curse, which, having dispatched the
main perpetrators of the old crime, now moves on to their heirs, who
are just as wild a set of rakes as their elders. There are rumours of
violent deaths preceded by appearances from an inexorable hooded
spectre, of inexplicable strikes of lightning, and of haunted
mirrors.
The
light-hearted Harley Venn dismisses all these as conjuring tricks. He
even hires a drunken charlatan of a professional magician to prove
it.
Clarinda
is far from sure that there is any rational explanation. Still, it
would take more than an enforced marriage to an incorrigible
pugilistic libertine or persecution from malevolent spectres to
damage her steely nerves and sense of the ridiculous.
This
lively Gothic comedy, written as a good natured satire of the cliches
of classical Gothic, gives the reader a warm-hearted and courageous
heroine, a rascally but beguiling anti-hero and an authentic
historical background to the delightfully over-the-top adventures, a
cast of wholly believable characters, an engaging love story and many
chills on its way to its tumultuous conclusion.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Excerpt: He
tried his beguiling smile again, an expert blend of mischief and
underlying sorrow. “You underestimate the influence you could have
on me. Bad as I am, and young as you are, I know that you could be my
saving angel.”
“No,
Sir. But I am happy to hear of your intention to change your way of
life, and I wish you all happiness with the young lady who does feel
herself equal to the role you honour me by offering.”
She
could sense that he was dizzy with humiliation, but refused to let
her fortune slip though his fingers so easily. Now, he called on
another quality necessary for a pugilist – self-control. Rising
from his knees, he took her hands before she could retreat, caressing
them. “Clarinda, you remember that you were the only respectable
young lady who spoke kindly about poor Foyle’s death. You were not
cold and implacable, then.”
Her
lips thinned. “I am only so now in refusing your offer of
marriage.”
He
dropped her hands. “So be it, Ma’am.” Too outraged to make the
normal civilities, he turned away.
A
blinding flash of lightning outlined the window, where a hooded,
cloaked figure stood seemingly suspended on the air. It extended one
skeletal hand as if reaching towards them and vanished even as the
thunderclap came.
Swearing,
Harley Venn dashed to the window. As the peal of thunder died away,
Clarinda came up behind him. “We saw that oddity before.” She
gazed about the empty street below. “This time it has appeared at a
first floor window. That is extraordinary.”’
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AUTHOR
Bio and Links: Lucinda
Elliot has recently become the proud honouree of the B.R.A.G
medallion for outstanding fiction for her Gothic historical
paranormal romance, 'That Scoundrel Emile Dubois' - (available from
amazon both in print and on Kindle for the very low price of 0.99
plus VAT, as the author writes to share her stories, not to make a
profit).
She
was born in England and loves writing Gothic stories - as she grew up
living in a series of isolated rambling period houses, in
Buckinghamshire, Devonshire and North Wales among other places that
would make perfect settings for such stories, that may not be
surprising.
After
that she lived and worked in London for many years, and now lives in
mid Wales with her family, and has greatly improved her Welsh, but
there is some way to go.
She
loves working out and weight training, and was once a Sportsfighter
(long since retired). She likes body sculpting, too. She shows a
geeky streak in her interests such as classic novels, history and
environmental matters.
She
loves creating strong female characters to provide an effective
counterpoint to the gung-ho males. She can't resist putting humour
into all of her writing, dark or otherwise.
Her
latest novel 'The Villainous Viscount Or The Curse of the Venns',
another historical Gothic with undercurrents of dark humour, came out
in August 2016.
At
present she is working on a sequel for 'That Scoundrel Emile Dubois'.
When
reading 'That Scoundrel Emile Dubois' the author hopes the reader
will laugh out loud as well as shudder at Sophie's Gothic horrors as
she becomes trapped in a great house staffed by the wicked Emile's
band of brigands.
When
reading 'Ravensdale' she hopes to give the reader a laugh and a
journey through an over-the-top romantic highwayman (and
highwaywoman) adventure that sends up the tropes of traditional
historical romance.
'Aleks
Sager's Daemon', a fantasy novel revolving around an author obsessed
by the life of the tragic Russian author Alexander Pushkin, is
darker, but she hopes the reader has to smile at parts, for all that.
In
'The Villainous Viscount' the author provides some more Gothic tropes
she has always enjoyed - a haunted castle with secret passages, a
family curse, and a vengeful spectre. Add to this the wicked but
beguiling young pugilistic Viscount, the plain but sensuous bride he
has married to get his wandering hands on her fortune, and a vivid
cast of secondary characters, and the usual comedy and the reader is
in for a lively read.
Authors
always have worked out far more about their characters than they can
possibly show in a book, even a longish one - not to mention all that
clutter in their heads gleaned from historical research, etc. Lucinda
Elliot's blog fills in these sorts of details about her characters.
Lucinda
Elliot hopes you will visit her blog on
[http://sophieandemile.wordpress.com/] if you would like to find out
more about her books, the characters themselves, her other writing,
her literary criticism, and reviews of both traditionally published
and self published novels.
Blog:
https://wordpress.com/view/sophieandemile.wordpress.com
Amazon
Links:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01KXU8QUC
and
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Villainous-Viscount-Curse-Venns-ebook/dp/B01KXU8QUC
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GIVEAWAY
INFORMATION: Lucinda
Elliot will be awarding free Kindle or pdf copies of all of her books
to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
Review:
This book was utterly hilarious, a jaunty fling, a sexy romance, and carefully researched and full of fascinating facts! I had so much fun reading it. Clarinda Greendale inherits a fortune, and sets off a chain of events that end in a fireworks display of ghosts, a curse, a rake (no, not a gardener's rake, but a dissolute Viscount!), and a rousing fight. The heiress, Clarinda, is expected to make a good, no, a very good marriage, now that she is wealthy. Clarinda had been content to spend the rest of her life as a single, untroubled by love, woman. This all falls to pieces when Harley Venn, a practically penniless Viscount, decides he needs a rich wife and sets his sights on Clarinda's bank account and voluptuous rear end. Now, I know, you're not supposed to hate the hero - and I promise, you won't. He's incorrigeable, but likeable, and his admiration for Clarinda is real. First he admires her backside, then he admires her brain - and what gothic hero ever does that? Harley is a rake, a gambler, a drinker, a womanizer - but he must mend his ways of die from a curse (ghost?) (trickster?) who is killing his freinds one by one. Determined to walk the straight and narrow, he begs Clarinda to save him from himself - and from bankruptsy. The author spices the book with detailed information about the time period, the food, the clothing, the life the upstairs and downstairs lived - and it is fascinating. I thoroughly enjoyed the whole thing, and will probably go back and read it again, and I will also look up more of this talented author's books! So prepare to laugh, to have your interest piqued, and to enjoy this Gothic spoof!
Thanks for hosting!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for such a brilliant review. What author could ask for more? I do hope you do indeed sample some of my other books. Obviously, I hope too that readers on here will try 'The Villainous Viscount' and like him as much as you did.
ReplyDeleteThe Villainous Viscount sounds amusing. I'm looking forward to seeing how Clarinda handles her involvement with Harley.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jo-Anne. I do hope you enjoy it, and I always appreciate a review.
ReplyDelete