Reviews

Claiming the Duchess by Sherry Thomas

alisonb's review

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4.0

Very short, but very sweet.

caslater83's review

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3.0

Overall, a pleasant story. The characters were well developed, but I felt that there should have been some more action packed in the middle. I felt like I jumped too quickly from the beginning to the end. I realize that this is supposed to be a short story, but I think in this case, it was too short. Sometimes more meat is needed!

hiba45's review

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emotional inspiring reflective sad fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes

4.0

read_ofthe_stein's review

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funny hopeful lighthearted fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.5

jenn_alwaysreading's review

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lighthearted fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? N/A
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? N/A

3.0

anabelsbrother's review

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2.0

TOO SHORT. It should have been a bit longer so the whole plot didn't feel as rushed.

kgroberts13's review

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3.0

Incredibly short but sweet story from Sherry Thomas.

The romance doesn't feel rushed, but bereft of the delicious details of the developing romance between the characters that makes her other books so enjoyable.

I adore an epistolary romance. I wish this were a longer book.

kayedacus's review

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4.0

3.5 stars

I had this on my “novella” list in GR---because I’m supposed to be reading/analyzing “novellas” this year as part of my professional development toward writing my own.

However, with everything that I know about what constitutes the difference between short stories (up to 10k words) and novellas (approx. 10k to 35k), I’d say this one is a short story, not a novella.

According to the technical information for the book, it’s 24 print (45 Kindle) pages long. If you take the age-old formula that a print page is approximately 250 words, that means this story is only around 6,000 words. Which puts it squarely in short-story territory (i.e., under 10k words).

Is that a bad thing that it’s a short story? No . . . technically. I have nothing against short stories. In fact, I read another short story (fantasy) right after this one and thoroughly enjoyed it.

I liked the idea of this story (even though I’d figured out the “twist” a few pages into it). It was the execution of the story that didn’t work for me in this short format. You see, there was no conflict. There was a meet. There was a happily ever after. But there was no rising tension. No relationship development. No conflict. No dark moment. Nothing to really make me care about either of these characters.

When reading romance, yes, I know going into it that the two main characters are going to end up together (even if only one of them gets a viewpoint, as in this story). That’s not the main point of reading a romance story. The point of reading a romance story is to see what these two characters have to overcome in order to be together. And in this story, it was . . . not really anything at all.

Even the fact that the hero is a plain “Mr.” while the heroine is a dowager duchess could have been thrown in as a conflict. But nothing is ever even mentioned about the disparity of their social statuses. It was all just too easy.

So why 3.5 stars rather than a lower rating? Because I love Sherry Thomas’s writing style. Before reading this short story, all I’d read of hers (so far) was The Burning Sky, the first book of her YA The Immortal Heights series. (LOVED it---review here.) Because even with all of the issues enumerated above, I sped right through this story, smiling over the zippy dialogue and the sparkling prose. And I devoured the excerpt of Beguiling the Beauty, Book 1 in the Fitzhugh Trilogy that this short story is an introduction to. And I immediately added it to my TBR list.

plottrysts's review

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4.0

More of a character sketch than a short story, Claiming the Duchess fleshes out the background of one of the most sympathetic characters in Beguiling the Beauty, Clarissa Kingston, Dowager Duchess of Lexington.⁠ Although it's only about 50 pages long, it packs in the tropes: love at first sight, hidden identity and epistolary romance all play a role. If you read the first book and liked Clarissa, you should definitely read this free prequel!⁠ That said, it doesn't exactly work on its own, but rather as a story to either whet your appetite (if you haven't read Beauty), or to give you a little sigh of pleasure after tying up some loose ends (if you have read Beauty).

10 Word Summaries:

Laine: Dowager duchess from a loveless match gets Happily Ever After.⁠

Meg: Love at first sight, fake identity, and a fistfight? Yes!⁠

www.linktr.ee/plottrysts

buuboobaby's review

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3.0

This is a really, really short story. Not long enough for much character development or even much of a plot, but it's a nice intro to Thomas' writing. Oh, yeah, and it's FREE.