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Mass Market Paperback The Duke's Wager and Lord of Dishonor Book

ISBN: 0451201396

ISBN13: 9780451201393

The Duke's Wager and Lord of Dishonor

For the first time ever, two Regency novels by acclaimed romance author Edith Layton -- packaged as one!Beautiful Regina Berryman -- pursued by the most notorious bachelors in London in a competition where her innocence was the ultimate prize -- turns the tables on her pursuers -- and changes the rules of the game of love....The daughter of a scandalous Countess, lovely Amanda Amberly had shied away from the clutches of those who expected her to follow...

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Customer Reviews

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A Tour de Force

I've only just finished the first book in this 2 volume edition -"The Duke's Wager". I was deeply moved by this story - it was not the usual Regency novel - it was dark, deep and difficult - sometimes almost painful to read. Others have summarised the plot (and the very few faults which appear) and pointed out the main area of conflict betwen two seemingly similar but ultimately different men. From the start I was attracted to the "Black Duke". Very recently I read an outstanding new biography published in the UK of the 2nd Earl of Rochester by Cephas Goldsworthy ("The Satyr"). Lord Rochester is best known as a Restoration Poet and is given a bit of coverage to high school students. However, what your teacher never told you was that he was not only a poet but a rake, debauchee (possibly bi-sexual), pornographer in chief to Charles II, sufferer of syphillis and a man bent on self-destruction who was redeemed on his deathbed (I think) by his love of life, the arts, women and the passions of friendship. The character of the Duke of Torquay in many facets of his personality, attitudes and experiences put me in mind of Rochester. However, Torquay is able to redeem himself before sinking into the abyss of total despair, self-loathing and possibly, even, a prolonged and ugly death from venereal disease. How he does this is the core of the novel. That the heroine was able to allow and encourage him to do it made me admire her when at first I despaired of her good qualities.I have found a copy of "The Disdainful Marquis" and will now read that to see if the Marquis of Bessacarr is able to put his experiences in this story to his advantage.A well written, passionate, deep and unusual story. I am so glad I read it - thank you, Edith Layton!

Lord of Dishonour - a Regency treat!

What can you do if you're a well-brought up young lady, but your mother is a byword for scandal? This is Lady Amanda Amberley's problem: her mother, the Countess of Clovelly, has not lived with her husband for many years, and indeed now lives 'in sin' with an elderly duke. While Amanda is truly the daughter of the Earl, the majority of her siblings are fathered by other men: hence the commonly-used description of her family as the Amberly Assortment.Amanda herself has suffered by association with all of this scandal: at twenty-three she is unmarried, and although she has a (rather pompous and dull) suitor, he is in no hurry to propose - she suspects that her background deters him. Amanda's mother, on the other hand, is keen to ensure that her daughter marries, and marries well.Christian Jarrow, Lord North - a handsome gentleman, but with the unusual feature of having one blue and one grey eye - seeks shelter and rest at Kettering, the home of the Duke of Laxley (the Countess's lover). Showing him to a bedroom, the Countess becomes 'confused' between the Blue Room and the Grey Room, and shows him to the Blue Room... in which Amanda is already ensconced. The obvious happens: they are disturbed minutes later, as North and Amanda are busy working out what must have happened and how they can resolve it.Neither Amanda nor North wish to be forced into a marriage neither of them wants. However, since this happened at a house party, there is no way of escaping the scandal. North therefore comes up with a suggestion...Layton takes time to allow us to get to know both North and Amanda, and they are both very likeable characters. North, who has a reputation - which is largely deserved - as a cynical rake, at first doesn't believe that Amanda is not cut from the same cloth as her mother, and it takes some persuading on Amanda's part to convince him that not only will she not fall into bed with him, but that she is an innocent. There are some lovely, poignant scenes in which Amanda hesitantly tells North about her upbringing and her realisation that she was part of a scandalous family.North himself is not without a painful past; without giving away spoilers, it's enough to say that his reputation is deliberately earned because of his own parentage. So ultimately Amanda comes to understand that North has good reason to be able to empathise with her.This is a lovely love story, of the type which will keep the reader sighing for some time after finishing the book. And I'm delighted that the publisher decided to reissue these two books in a single volume; otherwise I might not have been introduced to Edith Layton's work.One minor grumble: even though this is a later book than The Duke's Wager, she still doesn't understand titles. The title of 'Sir' - for a baronet or a knight - attaches to the first name, not the surname. So it's *Sir Giles*, NOT 'Sir Boothe'. I winced every time I read that.

Oh, joy!

Oh, frabjous day! Thank you, Signet, for giving us this perfectly splendiferous double-dip, just in time for those hot summer days when reading the ultra-cool Ms. Layton is the perfect answer for what to do while lazing in a hammock under a big, green, leafy tree.Forget the champagne, you won't need it with this wonderful duo. Any time you feel the need to treat yourself to something truly splendid, there is no vintage as splendid as vintage Layton.THE DUKE'S WAGER is a re-issue of her very first book, and all the reasons for her continuing success swirl and bubble around the reader like the very finest of sparkling libations. Who else but Edith Layton could--or would?--write a Regency romance in which the supposed villain gets the girl?When Regina Berryman, a beautiful commoner with no family and no dowry, is left totally adrift by the death of her uncle, she is perceived as a target for the affections of two of the most attractive men in London--the Duke of Torquay, Jason Thomas, and the Marquis of Bessacarr, Sinjun St. Charles. One offers love, the other wants her for his mistress. Although men have, for centuries, made a near-crusade about male honor, it is Regina's own sense of honor which brings both men literally to their knees. Within the space of an hour, she receives the final accolade from each of them--a proposal of marriage. Regina has learned her lessons only too well, and makes the only possible choice.You'll want to thrust your fist in the air and shout, "YEESSSS!" when you come to the end of this book. But you don't have to wonder whatever happened to these stay-in-your-mind characters. Layton brings many of them into her subsequent books. LORD OF DISHONOR didn't follow the above book chronologically, but no matter. It's still a marvelous--and unusual--vintage. Amanda Amberley is visiting her mother when Christian Jarrow, Viscount North stops to visit. Her Mama, the Countess of Clovelly, who has had a stable relationship for lo, these many years with the Duke of Laxey, (in spite of having a husband of her own somewhere else) seizes the moment and misdirects the handsome young man to the blue room rather then the gray one where he was supposed to be. But then, the blue room is where Amanda has been tucked away. It's so hard to pay attention to these details, given the fact that the dashing young lord has one eye of blue and one of gray. So distracting. Especially when he smiles just so.Thus begins this tale of two splendidly handsome young folks, with outwardly not a care in the world. Inwardly, however--ah, that's a different story entirely. Being deprived of a loving family, of course that is the thing each most wants, and yet finds it the hardest to acquire. Edith Layton is a wordsmith deserving of that term. She uses words in a way that no other has--or does. She's long been one of my very favorites, if for no other reason than her incredibly enticing heroes. Indeed, this book con

Classic Regencies from a Great Author

I have been a fan of Edith Layton since the original publication of 'The Duke's Wager' in the mid 1980's. I was blown away the first time I read this book, especially since it came from a first-time Regency author. I'm pleased to see Signet reissuing two of the best stories ever written by anyone and certainly my two favorites by this author. Both of these are original, well-written books that would be worth twice the price singley. Here you get 2 great books for the price of one! 'The Duke's Wager' features the Duke of Torquay, a hero to die for, in pursuit of a beautiful, poor woman without family to protect her. He discovers that not the love OF a good woman will redeem him but the love FOR a good woman. 'Lord of Dishonour' has a handsome but decadent hero who is living down to his expectations of himself, based on what he believes to be true about his family. Through the machinations of the heroine's mother, he becomes engaged to a virtuous maiden who is determined NOT to live down to the expectations of society which are based on her mother's past. How these two grow as people and develop respect and love for each other is truly a beautiful story. I highly recommend both of thes books!
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