Black Sheep (Heyer novel): Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
 
(12 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{subpages}}
{{subpages}}
{{Image|Gentle.jpg|right|200px|First edition cover.}}
{{Image|Black Sheep (Heyer novel) cover.jpg|right|300px|Original front cover of Heyer's novel ''Black Sheep'', art by Arthur E. Barbosa
© Bodley Head, Great Britain, 1966.}}
First published in 1966, ''Black Sheep'' is one of [[Georgette Heyer]]'s signature Regency romance novels. The main character is Miss Abigail Wendover, who at 28 years of age considers herself well past the age of seeking a husband, and has a handsome income of her own.  In [[Bath, Somerset]], a watering hole primarily visited by elderly persons needing to "take the waters" believed to have healing powers, Abigail shares a household chaperoned by a hair-brained older sister and rearing a beautiful, orphaned niece (Fanny), who is seventeen and will inherit a fortune at the age of 25.  While Abigail's conservative brother James, as head of the family, dislikes the women being in a separate household not under his direct control, it is also expedient for him that they are not in his own household, since his wife does not really want them, and he has his own children to contend with.


First published in 1966, ''Black Sheet'' is one of [[Georgette Heyer]]'s signature Regency romance novels.   An ebook of this novel can be borrowed via OverDrive<ref name=OverDrive /><ref name=BlackSheep />.
A crisis arises when the young niece falls in love with a sophisticated London buck, whom her aunt Abigail recognizes as a fortune hunter.  In figuring out how to separate her niece from this hazard without alienating her, Abigail comes into the orbit of the London buck's older uncle, who while not a fortune hunter, has a checkered past and (in some quarters) an extremely bad reputation. Abigail finds herself attracted to the apparently ineligible uncle due  to his wit and unconventionality but must hide her inclination from all her family and acquaintances, and especially from her domineering brother James.


The novel is set in [[Bath, Somerset]], a watering hole primarily visited by elderly persons needing to "take the waters" of springs that are believed to have healing capabilities. The main character is Miss Abigail Wendover, who at 28 years of age considers herself well past the age of seeking a husband, and has a handsome income of her own.  In Bath, Abigail has set up a household with an older, spinster sister as chaperone, and together they are raising an orphaned niece (Fanny) who is seventeen and will inherit a fortune one day when she reaches 25 years of age.  While Abigail's conservative brother James, as head of the Wendover family, dislikes the women being in a separate household not under his direct control, it is also expedient for him that they are not in his own household, since his wife does not really want them, and he has his own children to contend with.
An ebook of this novel can be borrowed via OverDrive<ref name=OverDrive /><ref name=BlackSheep />.


A crisis arises after the young niece, Fanny, falls madly in love with a sophisticated London buck, whom literally everyone except the young girl believes to be a fortune hunter.  In attempting to figure out how to separate her niece from this hazard without alienating her, Abigail comes into the orbit of the London buck's older uncle, who while not a fortune hunter, has a checkered past and (in some quarters) an extremely bad reputation.  Abigail finds herself attracted to the apparently ineligible uncle due  to his wit and unconventionality but must hide her inclination from all her family and acquaintances.
See [[Georgette_Heyer/Works|other works by Georgette Heyer]].


==Notes==
==Notes==

Latest revision as of 09:02, 14 March 2024

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Definition [?]
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.
Original front cover of Heyer's novel Black Sheep, art by Arthur E. Barbosa © Bodley Head, Great Britain, 1966.

First published in 1966, Black Sheep is one of Georgette Heyer's signature Regency romance novels. The main character is Miss Abigail Wendover, who at 28 years of age considers herself well past the age of seeking a husband, and has a handsome income of her own. In Bath, Somerset, a watering hole primarily visited by elderly persons needing to "take the waters" believed to have healing powers, Abigail shares a household chaperoned by a hair-brained older sister and rearing a beautiful, orphaned niece (Fanny), who is seventeen and will inherit a fortune at the age of 25. While Abigail's conservative brother James, as head of the family, dislikes the women being in a separate household not under his direct control, it is also expedient for him that they are not in his own household, since his wife does not really want them, and he has his own children to contend with.

A crisis arises when the young niece falls in love with a sophisticated London buck, whom her aunt Abigail recognizes as a fortune hunter. In figuring out how to separate her niece from this hazard without alienating her, Abigail comes into the orbit of the London buck's older uncle, who while not a fortune hunter, has a checkered past and (in some quarters) an extremely bad reputation. Abigail finds herself attracted to the apparently ineligible uncle due to his wit and unconventionality but must hide her inclination from all her family and acquaintances, and especially from her domineering brother James.

An ebook of this novel can be borrowed via OverDrive[1][2].

See other works by Georgette Heyer.

Notes

  1. OverDrive is a service that makes ebooks available to public libraries and to individuals; to use it, a logon account is needed (available through many libraries), or you can make a (free) account there for yourself.
  2. Black Sheep borrowable ebook at OverDrive.