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The Wedding Game
 
 

The Wedding Game [Large Print] (Hardcover)

by Jane Feather (Author)
1.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

Set in London during a time when traditionalism started giving way to modernization and suffragists challenged the status quo, this final installment in Feather's Matchmaker trilogy (The Bride Hunt, etc.) follows the nosy, righteous and sometimes self-righteous Duncan sisters as they tackle their toughest challenge yet—finding a wealthy, well-connected wife for a doctor who wants nothing to do with love. Douglas Farrell's businesslike approach to marriage immediately sets Chastity Duncan's teeth on edge, but as one of the secret owners of the suffragist scandal sheet The Mayfair Lady, to which Douglas has applied for matrimonial aid, she can't let her emotions cloud her business dealings. So Chastity finds the good doctor exactly what he has asked for. He soon realizes that he'd rather have Chastity, though. Douglas has a noble reason for seeking a marriage of convenience—he intends to use his spouse's money to set up a clinic in a city slum—but his haughty attitude toward aristocrats (who, he automatically assumes, care nothing for the poor) is off-putting. The book's conflict stems from a minor misunderstanding, and many of the goings-on are merely padding. But the primary romance, while lacking in passion and drama, holds enough charm to keep readers engaged.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.


From Booklist

The Duncan sisters may have curbed their morose father's spending, but only Chastity has to live with him in their London home at the beginning of the twentieth-century because her sisters, Prudence and Constance, from The Bride Hunt [BKL F 15 04] and The Bachelor List [BKL D 15 03] are each happily married. To generate income, the sisters produce a newspaper and act as matchmakers. Chastity meets a prospective client, Dr. Douglas Farrell, who is only interested in a marriage of convenience so that his new wife can produce clients for his medical practice. She is put off by his mercenary goal, but can't turn down a paying client. Douglas actually needs a wealthy wife to fund his true passion: helping the poor. Chastity soon realizes that there is more than meets the eye with the handsome doctor, but she has already found a rich, if annoying, woman who meets his qualifications. This is a perfect ending to a delightful trilogy, although readers will miss Feather's fascinating and entertaining characters. Patty Engelmann
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.

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Average Customer Review
1.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1.0 out of 5 stars Tedious and irritating, May 18 2004
By Tina Lewis Rowe (Mile High City) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Other reviewers have noted the many flaws that keep this from being an enjoyable book. I wanted to add that I don't think this is a fluke. I have seen the worst elements of this book in Ms. Feather's others. Apparently this reflects her style and ability--and I will avoid both in the future.

One of the major things that irritated me to the point of stopping the book and taking it to the used book store, was the author's tedious, boring, never-ending details: Every bite of food is described for crying out loud! How much do we need to know about the succulent meringue, the chocolate cream (one taste at a time!), the cake, the gingersnap, the tea and on and on? This would have been a short story, if not for trivial details that added nothing to the interest of the book. I've noticed this same approach to food in her other books and found it just as forced and foolish then.

And quite frankly, these sisters are rather obnoxious when you think about them. They live lives of privilege, ordering this and that from the servants, making fun of guests behind their hands during tea time, ganging up on hapless victims of their machinations. Ms. Feather attempts to portray these women as early feminists. She portrays them, instead, as smug, sexist and sanctimonious--it doesn't look any better on women than on men.

I've seen these same problems in Ms. Feather's other books but thought perhaps she'd improve. Sadly, I suppose because people like me tend to buy almost anything that fits a favorite genre, she just produces junk reading. This is one time when I've learned my lesson. I notice that most of the reviews on most of her work is tepid at best--with which I would agree. I don't need to kill time that badly.

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2.0 out of 5 stars Wedding Game **Sad**, May 16 2004
By Renee R. Jean "sunjewel" (Sulphur, LA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I would never have believed that Jane Feather wrote this book. I have enjoyed many of her novels in the past so I was very surprised how lacking this book turned out to be. It is very tough to like either of the characters and it drags along all the way through to the very end. I kept expecting something noteworthy to happen that just didn't. It was a story with possibilities that just petered out. It wasn't a horrible story just a very dull one. It didn't even seem to have the same tone of writing that Mrs. Feather has had in the past.
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