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A Gentleman Tutor

by Harper Fox

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234982,958 (3.54)1
For Frank Harte, impoverished schoolteacher, January in London means a yearly fight to survive. A former soldier, his injuries have barred him from all but the lowest paid posts, and the cold incapacitates him still more. The chance to work as tutor to Viscount Gracewater, son of the famous big-game hunting Earl, comes as a lifeline to Frank. The Earl's Knightsbridge mansion is huge, elegant - and, most temptingly, kept warm from basement to attics. Viscount "Scapegrace" Gracie, used to foreign climes, is delicate. He's also wild, charming, and only five years younger than Frank himself. His innocence and feckless good nature soon endear him to the quiet, reserved tutor. But the Earl's house is a dark one beneath its bright veneer, and the Viscount is in the thrall of unscrupulous Arthur Dickson, a handsome, brutal parasite who'll stop at nothing to retain his power over Gracie's heart and soul. Edwardian secrets burgeon as Frank begins a battle to free his student, confronting along the way the knowledge that he's losing his own heart to this brilliant and beautiful young man.… (more)
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Showing 4 of 4
One of the heroes was kind of painfully slow to catch onto something pretty blatant, and the ending carried on considerably longer than it needed to, but those are fairly minor complaints. I otherwise liked the writing and the characters were multi-faceted and grew on me. I would be happy to read another book by this author. ( )
  JorgeousJotts | Feb 14, 2023 |
Once I start a Harper Fox story I usually can't put it down, and that was certainly true for A Gentleman Tutor. There's so much trouble for both characters that I wasn't sure how she'd resolve everything, but I was delighted by the end.

Content Warning: name-calling, past and current hidden violence done to the younger man most of his life, one abusive sex scene, and a suicide.

Kudos to the author: for giving your reader hope of change, great leading characters (all six of them), and justice through wit and courage rather than violence and law.

Really loved this one. ( )
  terriaminute | Dec 4, 2022 |
This was a bit of a disappointment after all the good reviews. A lot of the writing is overly flowery or obtuse that it was sometimes hard to understand what the author or the main character, Frank/Francis, was trying to say. Something like the nature of his injury, as a major plot point, needs to be more clear - I wasn't even sure if he was partially or fully castrated or not until the salve rubdown scene and even then I wasn't at 100%.
Most importantly, the relationship between Frank and Gracie didn't feel like it had a natural progression, going from 0 to 60 very unnaturally and making me uncomfortable. Mid-book, we have Frank laughing to himself that he's in love with his student a mere week or two after they've first met and have hardly spoken about anything other than geography or Gracie's very unhealthy relationship with Dixie, when ever since returning from the war Frank was of the mind that he'd never be able to love a man as a man (due to his at-this-point-unclear groin injury plus the laws of the era). This "revelation" of his also comes after he walks in on Dixie and Gracie in very brutal and very public S&M session in the front hall, while the Lord (Gracie's dad) is actually home. Frank saves them from the Lord's discovery with what reads like a slapstick comedy scene but that is so poorly written that it's hard to follow.
Frank's various lectures in colonialism was definitely the author trying to get a point across and didn't seem like something a 25 year old Regency ex-soldier would choose as his first (and seemingly only) lesson nor that a spoiled 20 year old viscount would be particularly interested in, enough to kick out his best friend/lover over the tutor's hurt feelings. Dixie's attitude, while grating, was much more realistic as opposed to Gracie's wide-eyed innocent interest. Gracie was also written ridiculously child-like even as well-travelled, sexually experienced, and just as old as he is - another reason this relationship was uncomfortable to read.
Overall, this book feels wholly unrealistic and doesn't have enough smut to make it a pulp romance though the writing is at that level. This is one you can skip. ( )
  brittaniethekid | Jul 7, 2022 |
A real comfort read, with a cup of angst, a swirl of bitter suffering, and a whole bag full of love and comfort marshmallows. Oh, and a light sprinkle of wlw and trans representation, to add a little color (Would love to read the story of that romance - perhaps a sequel?)

This book really hit the spot in these dark days. ( )
  BananaSquirrel | Jul 31, 2021 |
Showing 4 of 4
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For Frank Harte, impoverished schoolteacher, January in London means a yearly fight to survive. A former soldier, his injuries have barred him from all but the lowest paid posts, and the cold incapacitates him still more. The chance to work as tutor to Viscount Gracewater, son of the famous big-game hunting Earl, comes as a lifeline to Frank. The Earl's Knightsbridge mansion is huge, elegant - and, most temptingly, kept warm from basement to attics. Viscount "Scapegrace" Gracie, used to foreign climes, is delicate. He's also wild, charming, and only five years younger than Frank himself. His innocence and feckless good nature soon endear him to the quiet, reserved tutor. But the Earl's house is a dark one beneath its bright veneer, and the Viscount is in the thrall of unscrupulous Arthur Dickson, a handsome, brutal parasite who'll stop at nothing to retain his power over Gracie's heart and soul. Edwardian secrets burgeon as Frank begins a battle to free his student, confronting along the way the knowledge that he's losing his own heart to this brilliant and beautiful young man.

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