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Penelope Williamson

Author of Altar of Bones

23+ Works 1,919 Members 45 Reviews 6 Favorited

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

Penelope Williamson writes under her real name and under the pseudonyms Elizabeth Lambert, Penn Williamson, and Philip Carter .

Image credit: Penelope Williamson

Series

Works by Penelope Williamson

Altar of Bones (2011) 575 copies, 19 reviews
The Outsider (1996) 252 copies, 7 reviews
Heart of the West (1995) 248 copies, 5 reviews
Keeper of the Dream (1992) 169 copies, 4 reviews
The Passions of Emma (1995) 149 copies, 1 review
Mortal Sins (2000) 121 copies, 2 reviews
Once in a Blue Moon (1993) 115 copies, 3 reviews
Wages of Sin (2000) 108 copies, 2 reviews
A Wild Yearning (1990) 92 copies, 2 reviews
Beloved Rogue (1988) 38 copies
Hearts Beguiled (1989) 28 copies
Wings of Desire (1989) 9 copies
Über den Wolken (1996) 3 copies
Péchés de chair (2000) 2 copies

Associated Works

Tagged

19th century (13) adventure (7) American (10) American West (7) Amish (16) ebook (8) fantasy (12) fiction (92) goodreads import (16) historical (45) historical fiction (29) historical novel (11) historical romance (102) medieval (11) Montana (16) mystery (28) New Orleans (10) novel (9) own (16) paperback (10) read (21) Roman (7) romance (101) suspense (18) thriller (29) to-read (144) unread (13) Wales (7) western (40) xmas-to-buy (8)

Common Knowledge

Other names
Lambert, Elizabeth
Williamson, Penn
Carter, Philip
Gender
female
Relationships
Proctor, Candice (sister)
Nationality
USA (birth)
Birthplace
Fairbanks, Alaska, USA
Places of residence
Fairbanks, Alaska, USA (birth)
Marin County, California, USA
Disambiguation notice
Penelope Williamson writes under her real name and under the pseudonyms Elizabeth Lambert, Penn Williamson, and Philip Carter .
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

49 reviews
Here's the second 400+ page book I've picked up thinking, just gotta get through this first.

And again...I read a lot today. Generally, they don't make them like this anymore. A meandering complex plot, a hint of a forbidden dynamic, and lordy time to develop. IT's just the best old school-ish has to offer in romance all wrapped up in a silver bundle. Super charming principals and dimensional villains-just good stuff.

Looking forward to more of Williamson's books.
½
I first read A Wild Yearning probably more than twenty years ago, so when I picked it up for a reread, I remembered very little about the story. I did seem to recall that I'd enjoyed it, and my reread of it proved that to be quite true. A Wild Yearning is an epic love story that spans about a year and a half from start to finish, but it never felt artificially drawn out or tedious. I love Penelope Williamson's writing style. The characters were very relatable and the plot was engaging. This show more is a dramatic story with lots of twists and turns that keep the hero and heroine apart for much of the book, yet unlike some other books I've read where this was the case, I always felt the love and emotional connection between them. In fact, the title is quite apt, as the author is very talented at bringing out that deep sense of yearning in both of them until they finally come together once and for all. The other thing Ms. Williamson is extremely good at is drawing the historical setting. I've always had an interest in the Colonial/Early American time period, yet it seems to be a somewhat rare setting for romances. This book not only incorporates this era, but is also very well-researched. The author really brought the setting to life with her vivid descriptions of life in a small settlement in Colonial Maine as well as the environmental details that truly made me feel like I'd been transported to another time and place. The main characters also spend time among the Abenaki Indians, which was equally as engaging. There was absolutely nothing about this book I would have changed, making it an incredibly enjoyable reread for me.

Delia is the focal point of the story and a very strong female protagonist. Not that we don't get Ty's or other characters' POVs, but I felt like the book was more about Delia's journey from a grog shop serving girl in Boston to the more respectable woman she longs to be. Ever since her mother died, her father has hit the bottle pretty hard, and he's a mean drunk. He often beats her and steals the money she earns at her job to support his habit. Delia wants nothing more than to escape this life, so when she sees Ty's advertisement for a wife, she thinks it may be the answer to her prayers. She falls in love at first sight with the dashing doctor, only to find out that he placed the ad for another man from the Maine settlement where he lives. Delia and Ty's romance is one fraught with heartache, passion, and danger, but through it all Delia is a trooper. When she first meets Ty, she's very rough around the edges. Everyone, including Ty, thinks she's a fallen woman, but in reality, she had enough pride and backbone to avoid prostituting herself to earn money, a fact which I admired. More than anything, she yearns to be a respectable lady. She doesn't really know the first thing about how to accomplish that, but she's a quick learner when opportunities present themselves. The thing I loved most about Delia is that she has a huge heart with lots of selfless love to give. Perhaps because of her background, she isn't judgmental of others. She tries to see the good in everyone, even when they aren't willing to give her the same chance. She's tough as nails, a real fighter, who always tries to make the best of difficult circumstances. Even when faced with marrying a man she doesn't love and someday possibly watching the man she does love marry someone else, Delia is up to the challenge, prepared to rejoice in his happiness if that time comes. That's why she's definitely earned a spot among my favorite romance heroines.

Ty is a stubborn, enigmatic alpha male with a lot of different sides to his personality. He was born into wealth and privilege, but when he was only six, his father was killed in an Indian raid, in which Ty and his mother were taken captive. As a result, he grew up among the Abenaki people with an Indian step-father he revered. He became one of them, but at the age of sixteen, his step-father insisted that he must return to his own people. Although Ty never got along with his grandfather, the man sent him to England where he was highly educated and became a doctor. He brought his knowledge back to the Colonies, where he lives in the small settlement of Merrymeeting, much to his grandfather's chagrin. I love Ty's idealistic nature and how he wants to help people and tries to stand up for the oppressed. From the moment he meets Delia, Ty is deeply attracted to her, but he has no intention of falling in love with her. After experiencing a great deal of loss in his life, he's very reluctant to love anyone. Ty's willingness to turn Delia over to marry another man after the intimacy they'd shared may be a bit hard for some readers to swallow. However, I wasn't overly perturbed by it, because it's obvious that he regrets that decision from the minute the wedding begins. He's jealous and protective, but doesn't realize that he's falling in love with her until much later when it's already too late. He has a hard time living with himself after that, but the deep abiding connection between him and Delia is still there, even as she's trying to make a life with someone else. When it seems like they can finally be together, Ty isn't the least bit shy about showing Delia just how passionately in love with her he is.

The secondary characters, of which there are many, are extremely well-drawn. I felt like I got to know each one in spite of some not being on the canvas for very long. The stand-outs include, Nat, the man who Ty brought Delia to marry. He's obviously only taking another wife as a matter of necessity. As a farmer, there's much work to be done on his homestead as well as two little girls for whom to care, but Nat still deeply loves his first wife and probably shouldn't have married again so soon after her death, regardless of the need. At his heart, he's a good man though. Nat's two daughters, Meg and Tildy, were perfectly rendered. Meg is still grieving her mother, and she's the rebellious one who doesn't want a step-mother. Tildy is sweet and inquisitive and seems to love everyone, including Delia. I was also quite taken with Caleb and Elizabeth, the preacher and his wife, who travel with Ty and Delia to Merrymeeting to start a church there. They have something of a secondary romance as they work through some difficulties in their marriage. Caleb is sweet and caring, obviously loving his wife to distraction. Elizabeth is very timid and reluctant to go to a remote wilderness settlement. I loved watching her grow and change, facing the challenges set before her with grace and dignity. Her friendship with the feisty Delia and seeing the passion between Delia and Ty really helped her to come into her own.

Overall, A Wild Yearning was an incredibly well-written and engaging story that I hated to see end when I turned the last page. It was a roller-coater ride I was all too happy to take with these characters. The love scenes were quite steamy and sensual for a book written in 1990, which was a plus for me, not just because I like my love scenes hot, but because they were imbued with a deep emotion and passion that I don't always find in my romance reading. I can totally see why this book won the Rita award. It's superb in every way. To the best of my recollection, A Wild Yearning is the only book I've read by Penelope Williamson, but this time around, it most certainly isn't going to be my last. I very much look forward to exploring her backlist soon.
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This had every opportunity to be a beautiful story—alas, it was not. A wishy-washy person cannot be loyal, and Arianna changed sides so many times that she lost every hope of my believing in her trustworthiness in the end. She asks Raine to trust her...only to keep life-or-death secrets from him, knowingly aiding and abetting her cousins who want to kill him. It's like she doesn't realize that not only will her husband be hurt, but she and all of his people will also suffer. The most show more unbelievable thing about this book isn't the magical aspect; it's that Raine never killed Arianna for all the times she betrayed him.

Overall, they're both idiots and jerks, but Raine deserved better.

(Note: There's an antisemitic section featuring a Jewish moneylender with gold teeth and even strips of gold tied into his beard that comes seemingly out of nowhere...)
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Another amazing book from Penelope Williamson. I'm starting to sound like a squealing fangirl, but if someone can write about the de-bloating of sheep and still make that part and parcel of a wonderful story, then there's true talent for you : ) Of course, there's much more than the de-bloating of sheep (I'll leave it to the curious and intrepid to find out what exactly that is) to The Outsider. The book is named for the man, Johnny Cain, who comes into the life of Rachel Yoder, a Plain show more woman widowed with a son. He is an "outsider" to her because he is not of the Plain faith, and brings with him a past that is violent, brutal, and terrifying, everything that is incommensurate, it would seem, with who she is and what she believes. The book is as much about the love that grows between these two as it is about the network of relationships and enmities that surround and test them - Rachel's family and religion, the people who do not understand and are cruel to the Amish, a cattle baron and his "breed" (part Native American) son who seek to drive out the sheep farming Amish. In Outsider, Williamson meets the standards she's set for herself in previous books. Her beautiful writing explores the complexity of the emotions and interactions of these characters, rendering each and every one of them multidimensional, living and breathing people. I really believed in the love between Rachel and Johnny - so few romances can make love seem real like that. My only complaint is that not once do we get inside Johnny Cain's head. Then again, that might have been the point, given the title, and anyway it didn't detract at all from the book as a whole. Heart of the West is still my favorite, but The Outsider is just as good. show less

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Statistics

Works
23
Also by
5
Members
1,919
Popularity
#13,414
Rating
3.8
Reviews
45
ISBNs
148
Languages
5
Favorited
6

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