Enchanting Pleasures

Enchanting Pleasures

2001 • 434 pages

Ratings3

Average rating3.7

15

Ah, Eloisa James. Sometimes I be like, “Oh wow, I'm in lurve” with her novels, and sometimes I'm like, “WTF just happened here?”. This is one of the latter times. As usual, an interesting premise - brother in law falls in love with sister-in-law-to-be. Not exactly original, but I do like Quill, a man who was crippled by a nasty injury but who despite debilitating migraines and pain, did not let it get to him. Gabrielle, however, annoyed the hell out of me. She seemed too flighty and ditzy for dear Quinn, whom I felt needed a gal with a sturdier head above her shoulders (and possibly, a bigger brain). Still, I rolled with it. I forgave EJ for that weird, extra subplot of romance between a couple that I didn't care less about. And that whole thing with the Indian prince flew past my head. It was all unnecessary padding. Take that out and it wouldn't make a difference to the story.

It's towards the tail end of the book that it began to unravel at the seams. By then Gabrielle's ditziness - which I patiently thought was cute - had gotten tiresome.


SPOILERS


There was this HUGE betrayal, and yet THAT was swept under the carpet as if it was a minor fracas. And how was that betrayal forgotten? By a convenient near-death moment that was so deus ex machina I had to roll my eyes. It was as if EJ didn't know how to solve the tangle created by the Betrayal and decided to toss it in there and then wiped her hands clean of the novel.

Only it didn't quite solve it because the characters were not repentant of what they did! Their love, in the end, feels like it stands on very shaky foundations. I don't have much faith they'd last more than a week in the 20th century!

Oh well, not EJ's best, that's for sure.

November 3, 2016Report this review