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Average rating4.4
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Series
3 primary booksWomen Who Dare is a 3-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2019 with contributions by Beverly Jenkins and Beverly Jenkins.
Series
4 primary booksLe Veq Family is a 4-book series with 4 primary works first released in 1998 with contributions by Beverly Jenkins.
Reviews with the most likes.
This is a good romance, and I'm glad I read it. I found the heroine, Valinda, very appealing, and she definitely fits the title & series title. She's very sweet and tender-hearted, as well as unafraid to fight for what's right. It's a good feminist coming-of-age plot, in my opinion; the story is about Valinda accepting who she is, finding a way to best make her mark on the world, and discovering that love can be real. Valinda's upbringing in New York City was sheltered, with a controlling father, and she traveled to New Orleans in order to teach the newly freed. In New Orleans, Valinda meets many women of color who manage their own lives, which is somewhat new for her. There's a lot of focus in the book on her friendships with her love interest's sister-in-law and mother, which I really enjoyed. Valinda wants to change the world, and with their guidance, she finds a way to do that.Valinda's love interest, Drake, is also a wonderful character. I loved their banter, and I laughed out loud more than once. They seemed perfect for each other and I believed completely in their happy ending. I thought the conflict between them late in the book was a little contrived. Valinda already knew who Drake was, and that he wasn't the kind of man who would try to control her. But I guess her hesitation to really marry him was understandable, given her upbringing.I have read two other books by Beverly Jenkins, [b:Night Hawk 12182154 Night Hawk Beverly Jenkins https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1347763121l/12182154.SY75.jpg 17131631] and [b:Indigo 347339 Indigo Beverly Jenkins https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1539072697l/347339.SY75.jpg 1360994], and I enjoyed them both. When I read that she had included queer characters in this book, I was curious to check it out. I usually read historical romance with queer main characters, so it was interesting for me to see characters of this type through the lens of hetero main characters instead. I felt the queer couple's story was both realistic and hopeful; they faced challenges, but so did all the other characters. Racism is a major topic in this book. I learned a lot about how difficult it was for the recently freed, as well as free people of color, to live in the South at this time (1867). There was segregated transportation; it was only lightly touched on in the book, but I was curious enough to read more about it, and learned that there were successful protests of the unfair system around this time. Also, Drake has to fight off a mob of white supremacists at the book's climax, which was very scary to read about. The city feels almost lawless, because people of color can't rely on the authorities to protect them. As a result, there is a strong sense of community, and of people of color and their allies working together to protect and uplift each other. Valinda and Drake are both dedicated to that cause, which is another reason their romance felt so believable to me.CW: Valinda is threatened with sexual violence several times in this book, but she is not assaulted.I look forward to finding out if the rest of the books in this new series focus on characters introduced here. I really liked that the book portrayed Drake's former mistress sympathetically, and I'd be especially interested in reading about her adventures in Mexico. But I'll come along no matter where this series goes next. I listened to the audiobook, narrated by Kim Staunton, and her performance was excellent.
I just love Beverly Jenkins! I haven't read any of the LeVeq books before (and I don't know whether I will or not, they're a little older than I usually go). but Reconstruction-era New Orleans is such a fascinating setting, and one I don't know much about, but you can tell on every page of this book the huge amount of research that went into it. I always learn something when I read Beverly Jenkins, and I enjoy myself as well!
(2021 Summer Romance Bingo: educator; would also work for construction)
At one point in my life I read historical romances heavily. Not so much no for no other reason that I read a lot of different genres but I still love to go back from time to time. And books like this one is why.
With this being my first Beverly Jenkins book and a bookstagram recommendation (for the life of me I can't remember who was the first to tell me that I must read it) I didn't know that is was book one in the Women Who Dare series but book four in the Le Veq series....which is great because I'd love to read about the rest of the family.
The book is set during the 1860s Reconstruction Era in New Orleans. That means that the setting is pretty heavy. People are trying to rebuild and cope with a massive change of life. But here you have this beautiful slow burn romance. That is not to say that the author shied away from the realness and hardships of the times. She absolutely did not. Which makes the love between Valinda and Drake all the more beautiful. Because between all that struggle and hardship two people managed to find love and you can't help but feel all the hope and beauty.....especially when one of the MCs didn't believe in love at all.
This is my Gilded Age Romance Across the Ages Challenge.
I'm really trying not to jinx it, but I'm having a really good start to 2020 when it comes to reading. My average rating is already way higher than last year, and I am very happy for it.
This was another book where our main characters seem to be the only ones who aren't going through a rough time but I still really enjoyed it. I like how Drake's family helped the community, the very idealized version of a mother-in-law, everyone is super emotionally mature, and there is a HEA.
Again, maybe not immensly realistic but made for a good romance during the Gilded Age in American history. The setting in New Orleans during Reconstruction post civil war helped make this story more serious and somber so the perfection in its characters and romance was a good juxtaposition to the other very real issues the community faced.