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Friday 23 July 2021

Book review: Lakeshire Park by Megan Walker

Lakeshire Park by Megan Walker

An engaging enemies-to-lovers romance set at a house party

The scenario

Amelia Moore’s stepfather is about to die and when that happens, Amelia and her sister Clara will be destitute. An invitation to Lakeshire Park, the home of Sir Ronald Demsworth, is their last chance to avoid penury. Sir Ronald admired Clara during their London season, and Amelia will do anything to secure this match for her sister. Unfortunately, Peter Wood and his sister Georgiana are at the same house party. And Peter is just as determined to secure the match with Sir Ronald for his sister.

What I really liked

It is a while since I read a house party romance and I enjoyed the informality of the setting compared with the London season and the banter between the hero and heroine. There are a number of quotable lines and Walker wove historical details throughout the story, such as the mention of Brighton Pavilion, an officer on half pay, and the importance of gloves.

I felt the tension building as the book moved towards the climax and I really liked the final plot twist.  Although I knew the hero and heroine had to get together (it is a romance, after all), Walker kept me guessing as to quite how the situation was going to be resolved.

Quote from Lakeshire Park by Megan Walker

A cheer for the baronet

It was nice to see Sir Ronald Demsworth very properly referred to as Sir Ronald. It makes me shudder when I come across Sir Surname instead of the correct Sir Christian name like Walker used. His mother is also correctly called Lady Demsworth. She doesn’t need to be referred to as the Dowager Lady Demsworth because Sir Ronald is unmarried.

The timing

I am a big fan of knowing when a book is set rather than trying to guess and Walker states clearly at the start that Lakeshire Park is set in 1820. It was an interesting year to pick as the Regency ended in January with the death of George III and fashions during the early months of the season would have been influenced by the court being in mourning. However, I am happy to assume that the Moores went to London after Easter and were largely unaffected by this.

It would have helped me to know which month we were in when the book opens as well. I tried to work it out, but struggled. By my reckoning, three weeks after the season ended would probably put the house party in July or the beginning of August, depending on when Amelia and her sister left London. This doesn’t quite tally with the blackberry picking which I would have expected to be a little later, at the end of the summer, in late August or September.

Daylight

I have noticed that many Regency authors struggle with the hours of daylight in the UK. In southern England in late August, the sun rises around 6am and sets around 8pm.

This means that the light would not be fading before a 6 o’clock dinnertime.

It also means that Clara would have had to get up extremely early to see the sunrise in Brighton! I have no geographical sense whatsoever, but my husband tells me it would also be impossible to see a sunrise over the Channel from Brighton in the summer.

Word choice

Walker has some unusual word choices which sent me scurrying for my etymological dictionary, but for the most part, they were spot on, and broadened my historical vocabulary. I’m not convinced about beachgoers, though. Georgians didn’t really ‘go’ to the beach. They walked along the promenade, enjoying the sea air, and went sea bathing – which was more dipping than swimming. You can read more about sea bathing in the Regency here. 

I was particularly interested to discover that the word ‘fall’ for autumn which we don’t use here in the UK, used to be used in England too! That was a revelation to me.

For me, the sentence structure was a little different from what I would have expected at times, and I found this a bit distracting.

Riding habit from La Belle Assemblée (1816)
Riding habit
from La Belle Assemblée (1816)
 A few little niggles

I am sure other readers will get lost in the romance of the story and won’t be bothered by such things, but there were a number of times when I questioned the probability of what was happening. Of course, it is fiction, and so anything can happen, but some things are less believable than others, particularly in a historical context, by someone like me, who knows the period well.  

One of the things that concerned me was Amelia riding bareback.  A little research informed me that it is possible to ride bareback in a side-saddle position, but it requires great balance, and this seemed an incredible feat for Amelia, who has not had much chance to ride since she was a girl.

There were also a few points of etiquette that didn’t sit right with me. For example, I could not believe that Lady Demsworth would have been so rude as to rise from the table before one of her guests had finished eating their dessert.

Improbabilities aside, by the end of the story, I was thoroughly invested in the characters and desperate to see how the situation could possibly resolve.

Clean and sweet?

No religious content or violence.

Heat level is low – nothing more than kisses.

Mild swearing – nothing worse than deuced, gads and blast

A sweet enemies-to-lovers romance with engaging banter and a clever final plot twist that took me by surprise.  

4 stars Highly recommended

4 comments:

  1. You say: "In southern England in late August, the sun rises around 6am and sets around 8pm." This would be using British Summer Time, a twentieth century invention. In the Regency, the hours would be 5am and 7pm, but your point still holds, I think!

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    1. You're right, of course. In fact, the situation was even more complicated than that as there was no centralised time and different regions set their clocks differently. I didn't even try to go into that! But I think the principle still holds.

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  2. Hi! Me and my sister have a podcast called "Worth the Read" and we reviewed this book on our last episode. One thing we talked about that was weird from propriety standards in that day was how Georgianna was blown off by Sir Ronald after they kissed at the ball. Because as we understood it back in that day, there was no getting out of a scandal like that without bringing shame to his marriage with Clara. What are you thoughts on that? I loved this post by the way!

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    1. There were double standards for men and women. A man might be labelled a rake for a kiss not followed by marriage, but a woman's reputation could be ruined. I think the person who would have suffered most from Sir Ronald marrying Clara was Georgiana. Whether an honourable man could have acted like that in real life without bringing shame to his marriage, I don't know, but that is the beauty of fiction!

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