Member Reviews

I've loved Beatrice and her Duke since the very beginning and the latest entry doesn't disappoint! Some series can get ho hum or blah after a few books but the author does a wonderful job of keeping things fresh and interesting. I also appreciate as a long time reader that half the book isn't spent re-hashing their entire history to this point which is one of my biggest pet peeves.

In any case, the humor and charm are still there PLUS a good mystery, which should make lots of readers happy!

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I love a good historical read and this one didn't disappoint. The story of Beatrice (I love that name), her position in life and how she deals with the Duke's family, particularly the Duke's uncle who is trying to make waves for Beatrice and her happiness.

Although I haven't read any of the other books in this series (which I now need to do) I did enjoy this book but now really want to learn more about where Beatrice started out and how her life evolved. But back to this book!

It is historical fiction, mystery, a bit of humour and a bit sweet and cosy. The characters are great and really make the story shine, and there is enough mystery and intrigue to keep you reading and keep the story interesting.

I can't wait to check out the other books in this series and then re-read this one in order of when they were written.

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Duchess Bea has “pluck”. Once considered a commoner, she weathered multiple attempts to avert her marriage to the Duke of Kesgrave.
Now, blissfully married, and well regarded by the household staff, Bea is visited by the very woman who had schemed to ruin her, now offering abject apologies. Extolling Bea’s qualities, and in hopes of regaining her societal position, Mrs. Norton has come to reveal a Kesgrave family plot to murder someone- The Duchess.
The Duke’s childhood and family life was traumatizing, and there is an ongoing dilemma in the marriage of his willingness to confide in his wife, creating a narrative much about marriage equality and partnership.
There are lovely, wry, descriptive asides as the Duke and Duchess wrangle in their pursuit of justice, understanding of themselves, and the depth of their affection.
There is more than one villainous character to be met and judged as each possible culprit’s testimony is laid out, a considerable amount of the details of the investigation being carried out in Bea’s mind. Even the vilest of characters come across with some unexpected humanity.
The solution carries with it more than learning whodunnit, but a sense of forgiveness, redemption,
the weight of societal position, and the power of love.
A Duke should Never underestimate his Duchess!

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I love Bea’s ongoing relationship with the Duke of Kesgrave. This is a very enjoyable series - I am so looking forward to more from this author!

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I really do love this series, and it's maybe the only clean regency series I actively read, so I can't evaluate this as someone new to the series, and don't think it would necessarily work without the context of the other books (nor do I think it's intended to). Like the other books in this series, it is slow to start and there's a lot of exposition on Bea and her investigating, and her relationship with Kesgrave. The mystery was much less appealing to me this time - she spent most of the book with Kesgrave, making them seem more like partners (similar to the first few books), and I loved how their relationship developed in this book.

If you don't like banter and a h/H who are frequently silly with each other, it probably won't work for you. Fortunately for me, I love banter, and Bea fervently wishing she could fling food items at Damien's head in the first book is one of my favorite details in a romance novel. Bea and Damien have such chemistry that really drives this series, and it was nice to see them have substantial conflict with each other, and to learn more about Kesgrave's life. I wish these books were longer, because it feels like each of them gets is either a satisfying mystery or a satisfying romance, but not both.

A lot of details are brushed over - Bea is taking self-defense lessons, which we learn almost nothing about. There was an entire book in this series from Flora's perspective, but she's only in the rest of the books as Bea's flighty cousin. I want to know about her and Holcroft, which is absolutely something that could be part of the series, even as part of Bea's pserspective. They're mentioned in a chapter of this book, and Holcroft's cousin reappears, but it isn't a satisfying show of growth among their relationship or for Flora alone.

Ironically, since I know my review is verbose, the writing in these books can be so wrought and so specific as to be tedious, but other parts of the stories which would be interesting and still contribute to the story are skimmed over at best. I enjoyed this addition to the series inasmuch as it complicates Bea and Damien's relationship, but found it lacking as a mystery novel and in the development of other characters and the general world/environment Messina has developed in this series.

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This latest addition to the Beatrice Hyde-Clare series will be enjoyed by fans who have been following her since the beginning. In the first half of the book in particular, the relationship between her and the Duke of Kesgrave seems to come full circle, as the focus shifts from the troublesome past of Beatrice's family to the troublesome past of the duke's.

The premise of having Bea's archnemesis, the woman who obliterated her chances of social success in early years, suddenly come groveling with outlandish gestures to gain forgiveness, is a fresh plot line and probably the most amusing and fun part of the book.

The mystery itself didn't grab my attention, especially in the last half, as it seemed to be mainly a revolving question of which suspects knew what facts at what point and I couldn't bring myself to care who was actually the culprit, so I found myself skimming through some of the hypothesizing.

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What a funny delightful book.This series just keeps getting better the dialogue between Bea and Kesgrave are so fun to read.The murder mystery was great guessing who was the murderer and I loved reading about the chase.

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Book 2! I Had read the start of Bea’s adventure with the first murder mystery dinner, and wasn’t sure how this second book would set up, and it set up quite well. I thoroughly have enjoyed a good WhoDunnIt but this one is better than the first. The uncle, a salacious man, I was rooting to die, right from the beginning. The duke has become one of my more favorite characters. All around, great book, can’t wait for book 3!

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The Beatrice Hyde-Clare series is always an automatic read for me (and quickly becoming a re-read as well). I was so excited when I saw this new title available on NetGalley and jumped at the chance to review it! And I was not disappointed. In fact, far from it.

In A Malevolent Connection, Lynn Messina yet again dazzles readers with her delightful characters and intriguing mystery. Many tasks went unaccomplished in the reading of this novel!

I hope I won't have to wait long for the next installment!

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I received a free copy of this from NetGalley and this is my freely given review.

I have to admit I loved this series from the first book. It is a fun series that is part cozy mystery and sweet romance. I love Beatrice Hyde-Clare, newly-minted Duchess of Kesgrave, her intelligence, lack of arrogance, curiosity, love of books, lack of confidence. I quite enjoy her relationship with her new husband, and their dynamic. She cannot quite believe that she, a prior wallflower over-looked for many seasons, managed to stand up to him, and confront him as a possible murderer in the first book, to being a friend and co-investigator/enabler in subsequent stories, to developing an abiding attraction and love later on. In this book, she is now settling into her new role as Duchess, and has been married for over a month to Kesgrave, and they are still working out what that means for the two of them, and she is still not sure how to go about dealing with some aspects of her newly elevated role. For one, she is having trouble finding a way to tell her staff about her dislike of pineapple and how it has invaded her meals, despite requesting it as a rare and exotic treat when she first became the lady of the house.

Bea does not intend on trying to find any dead bodies this time. Much of her time seems to be taken up learning self defense, on Kesgrave's direction, since she was almost murdered in her own home in the last novel. That, and trying to figure out a way out of the pineapple conundrum. So much time taken away from her reading!

One day, she gets a visit from a nemesis from her past, who decided to make up for a wrong by informing her of a danger to her life. Apparently Kesgrave has an uncle; the younger brother of the previous Duke, who thought he would be in line to inherit as the Duke was widowed and with no heir. That was until he got his mistress pregnant and chose to marry her. Apparently this uncle made several attempts to have his nephew killed as a child. Bea was distressed to find out that not only has her marriage now made her a potential target for this uncle, but that there was a lot she did not know about her husband's past.

This goes down the path of finding out if what the nemesis says of the uncle and his plans to have Bea killed or not is true, which leads the finding of a dead body (not Bea or her husband) and obviously they have to investigate further.

Again, I like the humorous, light hearted dialogue, but also the sweet dynamic between the new spouses. I also like the secondary characters. Flora seems to be developing more depth and Bea is noticing this as well - though it is not a smooth path to self-awareness for Flora. Bea seems to have earned some appreciation and respect from her staff; despite the inundation of the pineapple. She and Kesgrave definitely need to work out their new roles as spouses and learn to to be true partners, as opposed to the roles expected by Society. As always, I found this to be an enjoyable addition to the series, though I was thinking, especially as everything so far is written from Bea's point of view and Kesgrave at times can be quite quiet and contemplative, it would be very interesting to hear a bit more of his mind and perspective, similar to that tangent Lynn Messina went with the novel written with Flora as the central character going off on her own adventure, to find out what happened with the (fictitious) beau that Bea invented in the past.

A fun 3.5 stars, and I hope there is more to come.

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