Read this on my blog!Meg Cabot is my go-to writer when I want something light-hearted and fun. Yeah, I know that her books are cheesy, not particularly well-written and her heroines are all the same: the names and looks may change, but it's always the same pretty-but-not-gorgeous, slightly dorky chick, who doesn't let people walk all over her and has a special talent. I don't care. I like her formula. In fact, all the times she has tried to break it and write something different, I have ended up being bored by the novel. So, when a talk with a friend had left me craving for an historical romance book, and the one my friend was reading was so boring I almost wanted to tear my own hair out in frustration (it was "Almost Heaven" in case you're wondering, and from the reviews I read on Goodreads, I am one of the very few people who hated it), the solution seemed obvious. Did I get what I wanted? Hell, yeah!The main character, Nicola, is an orphan. Seeing how she has never met her parents, though, she doesn't particularly miss them and feels really lucky. She's sixteen and will spend her debut season at a friends' house in London. The reason she accepted that particular friend's invitation is not because she likes her all that much, but because she is in love on her friend's older brother, Lord Sebastian Bartholomew. Why is she in love with him? Because he's hot, and after a few minutes of conversation, she has come to the conclusion that he must love poetry as much as she does.Now, where this premise starts to differ from countless badly written YA (and non) novels, is that the fact that Nicola is in love with an idea is something that is acknowledge throughout the story, and that the real lord Sebastian is very different from the character Nicky has created in her head. In fact, he's not the guy Nicola ends up with at the end of the novel (it's not a spoiler, if you've read at least one nondescript chick-lit book in your life you'd predict this by the first page), but rather with a guy a lot better suited to her, whom she actually knows and with whom she is friends first.Nicola is immature. She's immature and she does stupid, self-centered stuff throughout the novel and though she does grow up by the end, she's not a terribly mature person when the story is over. For example, (slightly spoilery, I warn you) at one point she's told her life might be in danger. So she should be extra careful, right? Then she gets a note from a friend's fiancé, asking her to meet him at a shop near the house where she's staying, because he wants to buy a present for his and her friend's one-month anniversary. The present in question is something that would be considered to forward in their society, and asking a girl to meet him alone, even in a public place, is the height of impropriety. He also asks her not to tell anyone where she is going. Sounds suspicious, right? Especially in the light of what she has just found out.But nope! Her reaction is something along the lines of "Oh, how romantic! I must go at once and lie to the people I know and trust about my whereabouts!" Of course she gets kidnapped. I mean, she does suffer consequences from the things she does, but still! What the hell is wrong with you! Thankfully, there were other aspects of her character which I liked a lot: she's brave, she's optimistic, she's ready to face a scandal to get out of a situation she finds insufferable, but which her peers would have endured, she won't let fear rule her life.Her best friend and the love interest are also very likable characters, though don't really have a hidden depth or anything. I actually liked Nicola's cousin, a guy she treats badly and makes fun of for the whole novel, much more interesting than the two of them, and who grew a lot during the novel, much more than Nicola did. The humor is at times pretty funny, though the plot felt a bit contrived and was needlessly complicated. I mean, I was in it for the light-hearted romance and the balls and the pretty dresses much more than I was in it for the plot itself. Thankfully, Cabot seems to know what parts of her novel people are going to be interested in, so we do get a lot of balls and dresses and flirtations. This novel is cute, fluffy and utterly forgettable. I read it in a couple of hours, about a couple of weeks ago, and I had already forgotten all the characters' names and the title.I do recommend it if you want to read a clean, fluffy historical romance novel.
Akhirnya kebaca juga ni buku, setelah sekian lama nongkrong di rak. Cuma sehari kelar, tipis gini.Ceritanya ttg Lady Nicola Sparks yg berumur 16 thn dan br saja menyelesaikan sekolahnya. Nicola sangat suka dgn puisi dan bersahabat dgn Eleanor Sheridan yg mempunyai seorang kakak laki2, Daniel Sheridan yg sangat suka mengganggu Nicola. Nicola yg yatim piatu diundang utk tinggal dgn keluarga Bartholomew. Nicola merasa dirinya sangat beruntung, krn dia naksir berat dgn Lord Sebastian Bartholomew yg gantengnya menurut Nicola spt dewa. Dan Nicola tdk bertepuk sebelah tangan, krn Sebastian kemudian melamarnya. Nicola tdk mengindahkan peringatan Nathaniel yg mengatakan bahwa Sebastian tdk sebaik kelihatannya. Nicola sebal dgn Nat yg selalu mengganggunya, walaupun hrs Nicola akui Nat jg sangat ganteng.Pd saat yg bersamaan, wali Nicola, Lord Renshaw yg Nicola panggil si penggerutu berusaha membujuk Nicola utk menjual rumah dan tanah pertaniannya, yg kemudian Nicola tolak mentah2. Nathaniel kembali memperingatkan Nicola dan menyuruh Nicola menanyakan siapakah Edward Peas kpd tunangannya. Krn tdk mendapatkan jawaban yg memuaskan, Nicola menyelidiki sendiri dan menemukan bahwa ternyata ayah Sebastian ada hubungannya dgn penawaran pembelian rumahnya dan bahwa Sebastian tdk sungguh2 mencintainya. Sebastian mau menikahi Nicola utk membantu ayahnya mendapatkan tanah Nicola. Nicola langsung memutuskan pertunangan dgn Sebastian dan kembali ke rmh keluarga Sheridan.Di rmh keluarga Sheridan, Nicola semakin dekat dgn Nathaniel dan lambat laun menyadari bahwa selama ini yg dia cintai adalah Nat. Hanya saja Nicola tdk yakin Nat jg mempunyai perasaan yg sama terhadapnya. Dan ternyata Nicola jg terancam bahaya krn kekeraskepalaannya tdk mau menjual rumah dan tanahnya. Bisakah Nicola menyelamatkan diri dari bahaya yg mengintainya? Dan knp pula wali Nicola dan ayah Sebastian ngotot utk mendapatkan rumah dan tanah Nicola? Dan yg paling penting, apakah Nat juga mencintai Nicola?Teen HR nya Meg Cabot sungguh menghibur. Jujur saja, dibanding buku HR yg dia tulis dgn nama Patricia Cabot, justru lebih suka teen HR nya. Gaya Meg Cabot msh terasa bgt, beda dgn HR nya. Suka jg dgn tokoh Nicola yg pd saat itu bisa dianggap sangat fierce dan beda dgn cewek2 lain jaman itu. Lumayan asik deh dibacanya :)
What do You think about Nicola And The Viscount (2004)?
Ehhhhhhhhhh. I know this is basically the same thing as Victoria and the Rogue (including a matching (view spoiler)[kidnapping plot where the lady climbs out the window to escape (hide spoiler)]
—Emily
Ok.If you want to get teens into reading regency books, I'd say give them this book. I liked the characters. I liked how it was written. But my god, that ending went a total 180*.Let me explain:(view spoiler)[I felt like I was reading the Mediator series. The reason is that the main character, Nicola, ends up getting kidnapped and taken to a warehouse. There the book totally seems to jump time periods. The way the characters started acting and how the main character tried escaping on the roof to get away? I just felt the whole 'mystery' aspect was strangely shoe-horned into the book and not very believable. (hide spoiler)]
—Andi
All right...I borrowed this ebook from the library because I liked the cute cover. It's a cartoonish drawing of a Regency girl! But I also wanted to try reading another one of Meg Cabot's books, having only read one of her many novels.Nicola Sparks is an orphaned sixteen-year-old girl just out of school who's entering her first London season. Her charm, good looks and intellect are enough to attract any eligible bachelor, in spite of her mere 100 pounds per year. But when she receives the attentions of no less than three young men, what is she to do? Nicola learns that looks can be deceiving and that love can be found where you least expect it.Full of clichés in the Regency romance and YA genres, Nicola and the Viscount is still a fun read. It doesn't get too heavy, although there are some moments when Nicola can become a bit dramatic. I like reading books that take place in Regency England, but am not too fond of those steamy Regency romances. This book is nice and clean, with some stereotypical male and female characters, and a semi-predictable plot. I'm probably going to read another Meg Cabot YA Regency romance, since they're quick and light.
—Kat