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Mass Market Paperback The Last Waltz Book

ISBN: 0451191471

ISBN13: 9780451191472

The Last Waltz

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$25.79
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Book Overview

A year after her Puritanical husband's death, a woman must face the new master of the household -- a man she once loved long ago, but now holds in the utmost contempt. Immediately, the rogue arranges to hold a Christmas party, shocking the woman with both his brazeness and refusal to behave according to the somber edicts of her dead husband. But at the Ball, the handsome man asks for her hand in the last dance, and she has no choice but to accept...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

worth re-reading

This isn't my favorite of Balough's, which means I've only read it 2-3 times instead of 10-15. My main complaint is that the ending feels a bit rushed. Also, Christina was forced into a household with an abusive man who used religion as his excuse for condemnation and cruelty; I was raised in a similar household and it does, indeed warp you until you have a hard time recognizing goodness and happiness when it comes your way. That part I was willing to believe, however, Christina's abrupt reversion to carefree "reborn" woman in love was a bit hard to swallow. But the bulk of the book is very good.

Love Conquerors Misery. Grade: B+

In true Mary Balogh style, the author has written another powerful romance. Several years ago, Lady Christina spurned the impoverished Gerard Percy and married his wealthy cousin, Gilbert, the Earl of Wanstead. The puritan and callous Gilbert made life miserable for Christina. However, fate intervened and the rejected Gerard Percy is now the Earl of Wanstead. Balogh opens the story with the new earl returning home to claim the Wanstead estate. Mary Balogh writes this regency tale using her best poignancy pen. With timed precision, Mary Balogh permits flashes into Christina's deplorable marriage and the torment she endured. Fortunately for the reader, the author placed Christina's daughters into the pages, adding essential color to a dark story. Furthermore, Mary Balogh handles the inevitable marriage proposal extremely well. She uses her many writing skills to design a delightful uncommon approach. The Last Waltz is a melancholy story but in true romantic fashion, Balogh turns love into the victor and the reader enjoys the conquest. Yes, Mary Balogh has written her usual page turner; although, it is a sad and dark story, Balogh makes it irresistible. Astutely, Mary Balogh uses a Christmas setting. The author entertains the reader with descriptive seasonal traditions from the regency period. Balogh allows the boisterous, festive crowd to pull the reader into the many celebrations enjoyed in the earlier part of the nineteenth century. However it is the entire melancholy feel which influenced the rating. Another Signet Regency Romance book, no longer published, and available only through the secondhand market. Grace Atkinson, Ontario - Canada.

A low-key but still heartwarming story from Balogh

No, this book isn't Mary Balogh's best, though it's hugely better than books from the vast majority of other Regency authors. It is much more low-key than her other books, and as such there isn't much to get excited or sad about. It's not a tear-jerker, although there is no doubt that the heroine has had a tough life. I would have liked to find out more of Christina's and Gerard's background sooner; the information came in dribs and drabs and it was a little frustrating waiting to find out *why* she had married his cousin instead, and what the issue was with her father. The book also ended very abruptly; Balogh could have brought the characters together a little sooner and thus spent more time on the resolution.Still, it's worth buying and reading, even if I won't be re-reading it as often as some of my other Baloghs.

True love triumphs after all!

The star-crossed lovers in Balogh's last Regency were separated by lies and greed ten years before the story opens. Now the heroine's nasty husband (a pious "Christian" who was in reality a brutal wife and child beater) has died, and his cousin, whose love for her was thwarted, has inherited his vast estate. Since then, he's also become a wealthy (self-made) man in the Canadian fur trade. Now he's in England looking over his inheritance and wondering if he should be looking for a bride. The cold reception he receives from his former love doesn't deter him. He decides to stay and invite a houseful of Christmas guests. Balogh does star-crossed lovers well, she does children well, and she also does Christmas well (some of her most marvelous stories have been set at that forgiving season of the year). The combination is unbeatable! A warm and winning story to cherish and re-read. True love doesn't die, and Balogh will make you believe in its power all over again.
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