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REVIEW: Mine Till Midnight by Lisa Kleypas

By Jane • Oct 18th, 2007 • Category: C Reviews Category, C+ Reviews, Reviews • •

Dear Ms. Kleypas:

Book CoverThis was a much anticipated book from Cam’s first appearance in the Wallflower series. While many readers believed Cam to be destined for a romance with Daisy, Daisy was paired off with someone else and Cam was left for his own book. While the story contains a romance, it is much more a story of Cam’s life and Amelia’s life and their intersections rather than a union of the two.

Cam Rohan is a gypsy who has forsaken his heritage to work as the majordomo of St. Vincent’s gambling clubs. He suffers a good luck curse. Every endeavor which he undertakes result in more good things happening to him. Conveniently, loaded with all the money that a man could possibly need, Cam feels smothered by his good fortune.

Cam’s character is set up as one that is feeling some kind of “life crisis.” His friends, what few he has, are married and starting families. Cam begins to think of his past and his lost “tribe” and finds the constraint of the society life almost more than a Rom should bear.

Amelia Hathaway is the figurative head of her family who has become, through a curse of their own, the newest family of the Ramsay viscountcy. Miss Amelia’s older brother, Leo, is the newest Viscount, but he’s more intent on drowning his sorrows in liquor, women and other vices to pay attention to his family’s needs. The book opens with Amelia searching Cam’s gambling house and then a neighboring brothel in order to seek out her brother and haul him home.

The opening sequence had me raising my eyebrows as Amelia, without regard for her reputation, first demands entrance into an exclusive male gambling hall and then down the street into a brothel ending with a public kiss exchanged with Cam in the middle of the street, blocked by only the carriage. Later on, Amelia throws up concern for her reputation when Cam maneuvers her into private situations but those protestations seemed incongruous given her initial forays into the streets of London.

One of the problems with this book was its cast of many characters. Not only were there five Hathaways, all of whom demanded to be both seen and heard, but also St. Vincent, Evie, Lord Westcliff, Lilith, Captain Swansea, another Roma, and a ghost. Individually, Cam and Amelia were interesting characters although Cam appeared to have a deeper character arc than Amelia.

There are many issues that are unresolved at the end of this book than tend to make this story feel like part of a larger series instead of a wholly contained novel. To some degree, that lack of resolution of some issues, particularly Cam’s past, seems to belie the seeming contentment that he has found with Amelia. I found the failure to deal with the societal issues of a gently bred woman’s marriage to a gypsy to be disconcerting especially since Amelia had a number of unmarried younger sisters who would be making their debut in a few years. I couldn’t help but wonder if their lives wouldn’t have some taint as a result of a marriage between Amelia and Cam. It was hard for me to buy that this wouldn’t be an issue with Amelia since her whole life seemed to be consumed with protecting and providing for her family.

While I believed that the two were well suited, it seemed that the plot revolved around their individual lives rather than the union of their lives. I liked the parts which discussed the flavor of the Roma and I liked each character individually. I thought Cam was a particularly lovely hero with a different type of sensibility; more of a seducer than a commander. But I think the book suffered from its own identity crisis. It wasn’t sure whether it was the love story between Cam and Amelia, the redemptive story of Amelia’s wastrel brother Leo, the pathos of the Roma lifestyle; the romance between Amelia’s sister and their Roma servant, and so on. All of the issues that were raised were interesting and poignant, yet none felt fully fleshed out. It is above average but the seeming inconsistencies in character and the multitude of unresolved issues left me shaking my head a bit. C+

Best regards,

Jane

This book can be purchased in mass market. No ebook format as far as I know.

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Jane is a long time romance reader whose passion is, you guessed it, reading. Jane also does not like to talk about herself in the third person, but apparently this is the way that this biography thing works (although in a true biography, someone else would be writing this blurb). Anyway, currently Jane loves urban fantasy authors Patricia Briggs and Ilona Andrews. She's really excited about this year's crop of historicals including Joanna Bourne's The Spymaster's Lady and Sherry Thomas' Private Arrangements and the upcoming Loretta Chase Her Scandalous Ways. She's looking for a good contemporary author. Email her with a recommendation!
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11 Responses »

  1. I have yet to read this, but I am very relieved that Kleypas will continue to write historical Romance. It will be interesting to see Kleypas develop under the auspices of a new publisher, since she had been with Avon for so long.

  2. I couldn’t agree more. While Cam was an interesting hero, Amelia would uncharacteristically swing from uptight mother hen to bold exhibitionist (mores be damned!)

    And the ghost thing, meh.

  3. I found the failure to deal with the societal issues of a gently bred woman’s marriage to a gypsy to be disconcerting especially since Amelia had a number of unmarried younger sisters who would be making their debut in a few years. I couldn’t help but wonder if their lives wouldn’t have some taint as a result of a marriage between Amelia and Cam.

    The capitalist in me says that Cam’s money will make up for a lot of faults.

  4. I wait to see the fangirl fallout.

  5. Lisa Kleypas is usually an automatic buy for me, but I think I’ll skip this one. Or maybe pick it up at the used bookstore if I ever actually run out of books to read, which is unlikely given my recent shopping spree at bn.com and ebay.

  6. I found the failure to deal with the societal issues of a gently bred woman’s marriage to a gypsy to be disconcerting especially since Amelia had a number of unmarried younger sisters who would be making their debut in a few years. I couldn’t help but wonder if their lives wouldn’t have some taint as a result of a marriage between Amelia and Cam. It was hard for me to buy that this wouldn’t be an issue with Amelia since her whole life seemed to be consumed with protecting and providing for her family.

    I had this thought as well and was a little disappointed that Kleypas had Amelia dismiss the class/ethnic difference issue so blithely, particularly since she did deal with class snobbery issues in Secrets of A Summer Night. Perhaps Kleypas did not want Amelia’s character to generate readers’ accusations of shallowness and snobbery like Annabel from SOASN did, but it just didn’t seem realistic that Cam’s Rom background was almost a non-issue to Amelia, especially given the fact that almost everyone else (excepting, of course, the Wallflower alumnae) treated him like a servant or an untouchable, and expressed horror and disbelief at the idea of a relationship between Cam and Amelia. Even Cam’s “best friends”, St. Vincent and Westcliff, all but admitted to his face that they would not want their daughters to marry a Rom. That seemed more realistic to me than Amelia and her sisters’ attitudes, actually.

    Admittedly, Amelia had grown up with Merripen (I keep wanting to write “Merrylegs”…wrong book) and was more tolerant of Roms than most of her era and station, (although she did seem to me to treat Merripen rather like a servant and didn’t seem too thrilled about his romantic interest in her sister.) Also, she was described as fairly unconventional and out of step with traditional society views, so I suppose that that allows her some leeway to be unusually open-minded and unbigoted for her time. But it seemed to me that the book would have been more interesting if the ethnic/class issues were more of a plot point, particularly if Amelia had struggled with a little bit of ethnic prejudice herself or at least brooded about the potential backlash of her marriage to Cam (who was not only part-Rom by birth, but seemed to flaunt his gypsy heritage.)

  7. What Elle said. It was an issue for some but never disposed of in a way that made sense to me, as was many of the issues in the book. But, I loved Cam. Kleypas’ portrayal of this non traditional hero was wonderful and the imagery was strong and evocative.

  8. I’m buying this one for the Merripen/Win romance. I read an excerpt from their book and it caught my interest so I want to catch what tidbits I can in MTM.

    The Amelia/Cam storiline sounds a bit meh to me.

    We’ll see.

  9. I read this one yesterday while nursing a mild hangover and while that may have clouded my judgement a little, I found I really enjoyed it.
    The only problem I really had was also with the glossing over of the class issues and how it would later affect the family. But (as Ann Bruce also mentioned) I was able to reconcile that with the fact that Cam’s money would probably smooth the way somewhat.
    I would have given it a B+, loved the characters, thought the Roma aspect was something different (always a plus!) and also loved the sub-plots - numerous as they were!

  10. I loved this book as I love all of the Lisa Kleypas books. I especially like the reappearing characters. I am anxious to know if there will be a sequel so that the tatoo link will be solved. There are at least 3 more stories possible from this book!

  11. I absolutely loved mine till midnight. Having read her other novels i think she is an amazing writer.

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