Ratings10
Average rating3.5
In this spectacularly imaginative and ghoulishly fun Gothic murder mystery brimming with romance, betrayals, and chills, a fake spiritualist is summoned to hold a séance for a bride who died on the eve before her wedding, but as nefarious secrets are revealed, the line between hoax and haunting blurs. Be careful what you conjure... In Victorian London, Genevieve Timmons poses as a spiritualist to swindle wealthy mourners--until one misstep lands her in a jail cell awaiting the noose. Then a stranger arrives to make her a peculiar offer. The lord he serves, Mr. Pemberton, has been inconsolable since the tragic death of his beautiful bride-to-be. If Genevieve can perform a séance persuasive enough to bring the young lord peace, she will win her freedom. Soothing a grieving nobleman should be easy for someone of Genevieve's skill, but when she arrives at the grand Somerset Park estate, Mr. Pemberton is not the heartbroken lover she expected. The surly--yet exceedingly handsome--gentleman is certain that his fiancée was murdered, even though there is no evidence. Only a confession can bring justice now, and Mr. Pemberton decides Genevieve will help him get it. With his knowledge of the household and her talent for illusion, they can stage a haunting so convincing it will coax the killer into the light. However, when frightful incidents befall the manor, Genevieve realizes her tricks aren't required after all. She may be a fake, but Somerset's ghost could be all too real... A Dreadful Splendor is a wickedly whimsical brew of mystery, spooky thrills, and intoxicating romance that makes for an irresistibly fun and page-turning read.
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This book was an odd mixture of tropes that I'm personally already a bit sick of, but with a fairly compelling mystery at the back of it all. I did want to keep going and find out the solution to the mystery, but by the last quarter of the book I was starting to skim - a lot.
This book is chock full of tropes, but one of the most annoying of all is having an apparently 19th century heroine espouse 21st century values - all too common in this historical fiction genre nowadays, sadly. Genevieve grows up poor and struggling with her mom to put food in their mouths, which is why they began this business of being spiritualists to begin with. When she is basically thrown into the employ of Mr. Pemberton, Earl of Chadwick, and is invited to Somerset Park, his luxurious manor, Genevieve goes on a few tirades about how unfair it is that the privileged should have everything while there are so many who have nothing. Now, this sentiment isn't exactly nonexistent during the Victorian period, but it's clear that this was written with a very 21st century lens, which took me out of the story a bit. Granted that this isn't meant to be an incredibly accurate historical piece, but I just felt like it was shoved in there to soothe 21st century sensibilities about the very strong class hierarchy system in this setting without really giving it serious thought. Plus, the whole message is undermined by how the plot develops (true for this book, but also a trope across the whole hist-fic-romance genre as a whole): Genevieve supposedly laments about how unfair all this class system is, but in the end she falls in love with a rich, titled Earl and not only that, she comes into her own money and ends up a rich woman in her own right. So... it seems like you only need to be bitter about it when you're the one who's poor, but it's totally fine once you're in the position to reap the benefits of the very system that you apparently set yourself against all along. I also find that it really undermines the whole thing when you have a heroine who hates inequality but chooses to fall in love with a rich, titled man in the end, it'it's almost never someone from a lower socioeconomic status, or even if he is he wouldn't stay that way for the rest of the book.
At the very least though, this book stays away from some tropes that would've made me DNFed immediately, like insta-love/lust, or overexplaining the setting to the audience and being overly conscious about how “period” it is, so I could at least sit through the whole book. The mystery was really the saving grace through this book and was the one thing that kept me going. I didn't feel attached to any of the characters at all, but at least I also wasn't incredibly annoyed by any of them. For someone who grew up in a brothel, though, Genevieve is incredibly prejudiced against sex workers. I would have expected that she would at least have a more nuanced view, and understand the hardships that come with being one, and how most of them usually have no other choice. At the very least, she directed her anger to both the women plying it and the men demanding the trade, rather than just to women.
It was an overall serviceable time with a decent mystery at the heart of it all. I'd recommend if you're in the mood for Gothic murder mysteries and don't mind the tropes of contemporary hist-fic.
A Dreadful Splendor is an entertaining gothic mystery that'll hook you from the very beginning!
The mystery at the novel's center – did Audre jump from the cliff or was she murdered – took great twists and turns, some predictable and some not! As the story progresses, the reader and the MC Genevieve start questioning whether ghosts just might be real. A tremendous gothic mystery!
I felt the love plotline was very well developed, and I was rooting for them from the get-go.
At times the narration became repetitive. The most common occurrences were when Genevieve recounted her deals with Mr. Pemberton and Mr. Lockhart and the consequences. As a reader, this constant reiteration of facts you already know gets annoying fairly quickly.
There were also some frustrating plotlines. (Genevieve's continued suspicion of Mr. T even though it wouldn't be logical for him to secretly enlist her help in finding the murderer if he was the murderer. That stuck along waaay too long and made me doubt Genevieve's mystery-solving capabilities.) However, they weren't big enough to detract from my overall enjoyment of the story.
I'd definitely recommend A Dreadful Splendor! I'll be checking out B.R Myers future work for sure!
Audiobook Review: The voice actor, Olivia Vinall, did a splendid job! I think I liked the book as much as I did because of her performance. The parts that felt tedious or repetitive weren't as much of an annoyance since I was listening to a good performance. I'll definitely be searching out more of her work!
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for providing this ARC in exchange for an honest review.
I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own. (via Netgalley)
Closer to 4.5 stars. I enjoyed this! It moved at a good pace that made it hard to put down at times. I had some suspicions on the twists but most of my guesses were off the mark. I wouldn't mind seeing more from the characters in future stories.
Closer in plot and narrative style to Jane Eyre than Rebecca, this is a traditional Gothic tale with a slow burn, sweet romance and tidy ending.