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Fiction. Romance. Historical Fiction. HTML:New York Times bestselling author Mary Jo Putney is acclaimed by critics and readers alike for unforgettable storytelling and arresting characters. Now she introduces a Regency England you've never seen before, where dazzling magic is practiced in all but the highest reaches of Society, and where desire is the most mysterious and seductive force of all.One of the Duke of Wellington's most respected officers, Jack Langdon, Lord Frayne, takes his show more family's honor very seriously. He also hides a shameful secret: a talent for sorcery he has been raised to suppress and openly reject. But after an injury lands Jack at death's door, his only chance at survival lies with Abigail Barton, a peer's daughter and a skilled wizard. Her price: Jack's hand in marriage. It isn't long before Jack feels an irresistible attraction to his forthright new wife, whose allure is as intense as the reawakening magical abilities he can no longer deny.
Abigail had to make a great sacrifice to perform a spell powerful enough to save Lord Frayne, and although she cannot help but be drawn to her reluctant husband's surprising sensitivity and kindness, she knows all too well his distaste for magic. Once she has Jack's name and the child she has always longed for, she is determined to live apart from him so that he can preserve his reputation--and so that she herself can stay true to her gifts.
But neither Abby nor Jack reckons on the deep, long-simmering passions her spell ignites. They challenge each other's extraordinary powers and deepest desires for the sake of a love that may cost them all they cherish most.
With breathtaking skill and vivid historical detail, Mary Jo Putney weaves a tale of enchantment, mystery, and romance that will forever hold you spellbound.
From the Hardcover edition.. show less
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I thought the premise of The Marriage Spell was really promising - roughly Harry Potter Regency Romance, with the twist that magic is frowned upon by elite English society - and Putney can be a really fantastic writer. But this book didn't work for me on pretty much any level.
Putney makes the easiest and biggest mistake authors run into when they write magic into their books - it diffuses all the conflict & drains any and all tension from the novel. Has a character been ensorcelled? Well, just remove the spell! Is somebody injured? Heal him/her! Does somebody seem to be mean or unkind? Probably evil magic at work! Is something unknown or mysterious? Magic will tell you the answer to any difficult question! And quickly, too.
Nothing is show more hard. Nothing is challenging. As soon as a problem appears on the horizon, it is solved. Sometimes it's not instantaneous, but the danger disappears awfully fast.
The relationships between the characters work really similarly, which is even more mysterious since Putney can do such a good job building relationships. But it takes Jack about 3 pages to go from being resentful about being forced into marriage to being really content about it. It takes Jack's sister about 3 pages to go from being suspicious of Abby to being her new best friend.
So although the plot works - something happens, spurring another event, spurring another one - there's never any momentum or anxiety to it.
Add to that that the writing was really, really flat - here's a typical paragraph:
"He half expected Abby to gently say that he was being irrational, probably because he was jealous of his mother's attention, but instead she said seriously, "If your instinct says Scranton is a bad man, you're probably right. Your nature is too generous to be suspicious when there is no cause."
There's nothing actually *wrong* with that paragraph. It flows, it makes sense, the characters are expressing rational sentiments in line with their personalities. But it gives everything away. You don't have to wonder why Jack might be irrational, why Abby might tell him so, whether or not Jack has good instincts, how he came by them...it's just all laid out. There's nothing that makes you imagine or wonder.
I also had a poor sense of physicality throughout - Abby is apparently a big, curvacious woman and Jack is a strapping brute of a man, but I never felt it - I didn't doubt that it was true, but they weren't palpable characters to me.
I was disappointed. With such a good author, and such a good idea, it's a shame that the book turned out so badly. show less
Putney makes the easiest and biggest mistake authors run into when they write magic into their books - it diffuses all the conflict & drains any and all tension from the novel. Has a character been ensorcelled? Well, just remove the spell! Is somebody injured? Heal him/her! Does somebody seem to be mean or unkind? Probably evil magic at work! Is something unknown or mysterious? Magic will tell you the answer to any difficult question! And quickly, too.
Nothing is show more hard. Nothing is challenging. As soon as a problem appears on the horizon, it is solved. Sometimes it's not instantaneous, but the danger disappears awfully fast.
The relationships between the characters work really similarly, which is even more mysterious since Putney can do such a good job building relationships. But it takes Jack about 3 pages to go from being resentful about being forced into marriage to being really content about it. It takes Jack's sister about 3 pages to go from being suspicious of Abby to being her new best friend.
So although the plot works - something happens, spurring another event, spurring another one - there's never any momentum or anxiety to it.
Add to that that the writing was really, really flat - here's a typical paragraph:
"He half expected Abby to gently say that he was being irrational, probably because he was jealous of his mother's attention, but instead she said seriously, "If your instinct says Scranton is a bad man, you're probably right. Your nature is too generous to be suspicious when there is no cause."
There's nothing actually *wrong* with that paragraph. It flows, it makes sense, the characters are expressing rational sentiments in line with their personalities. But it gives everything away. You don't have to wonder why Jack might be irrational, why Abby might tell him so, whether or not Jack has good instincts, how he came by them...it's just all laid out. There's nothing that makes you imagine or wonder.
I also had a poor sense of physicality throughout - Abby is apparently a big, curvacious woman and Jack is a strapping brute of a man, but I never felt it - I didn't doubt that it was true, but they weren't palpable characters to me.
I was disappointed. With such a good author, and such a good idea, it's a shame that the book turned out so badly. show less
Jack Langdon, Lord Frayne, is hunting with his friends when his horse stumbles and he is thrown. Severely injured he is taken to the home of a healer. The female wizard Abby Stanton, great healer of the region, conducts a healing circle repairing Lord Frayne's broken neck saving his life. But the payment that had been arranged was marriage.
Abby offers to release Jack from the promise, but being a man of honor, Jack maintains that he will wed her. Their romance is amusing and filled with the discovery of Jack's magical aspects. Though the Ton is not enamored of wizards, with Jack's and his sister's sponsorship, Abby is accepted into society.
This was my first book by Mary Jo Putney but I will definitely look for more.
Abby offers to release Jack from the promise, but being a man of honor, Jack maintains that he will wed her. Their romance is amusing and filled with the discovery of Jack's magical aspects. Though the Ton is not enamored of wizards, with Jack's and his sister's sponsorship, Abby is accepted into society.
This was my first book by Mary Jo Putney but I will definitely look for more.
This book was so bad that I’m on my third time reading it….or listening to it as the case may be. I love romance novels. Who doesn’t? They’re adult fairy tales. I picked this one up years ago and gave it a listen and couldn’t stop. I dragged my CD players around with me, not to find out how it ended, because come on, it’s a romance novel, but because it was so unintentionally funny that I didn’t want to miss a bit of it.
The story takes place in regency era England and concerns a woman with healing powers named Abby who is in love from afar with Jack Langdon. He is injured in a hunting accident and nearly dies before she performs a “healing circle” with other people of wizardly powers and heals him. Her price for this show more is marriage. The added piece to this is that Jack also has powers and he hates wizards. As the story unfolds predictably Jack learns to accept Abby and her powers and his as well as he battles (I LOVE THIS PART) his evil stepfather.
The dialogue is ridiculous and the plot twists are enhanced with Abby using her powers to heal everybody in sight. Enhancing this mix are the vocals by Simon Prebble who puts an overwrought emphasis on such literary masterpieces as “I’m going to make love to you until all your bodily energy is restored”. I can’t even type that line without giggling.
I heartily recommend this book to anyone who finds bad dialogue and an overwrought reading style funny or who just loves grown up fairy tales. show less
The story takes place in regency era England and concerns a woman with healing powers named Abby who is in love from afar with Jack Langdon. He is injured in a hunting accident and nearly dies before she performs a “healing circle” with other people of wizardly powers and heals him. Her price for this show more is marriage. The added piece to this is that Jack also has powers and he hates wizards. As the story unfolds predictably Jack learns to accept Abby and her powers and his as well as he battles (I LOVE THIS PART) his evil stepfather.
The dialogue is ridiculous and the plot twists are enhanced with Abby using her powers to heal everybody in sight. Enhancing this mix are the vocals by Simon Prebble who puts an overwrought emphasis on such literary masterpieces as “I’m going to make love to you until all your bodily energy is restored”. I can’t even type that line without giggling.
I heartily recommend this book to anyone who finds bad dialogue and an overwrought reading style funny or who just loves grown up fairy tales. show less
I enjoyed the story for its blend of fantasy and romance and for it's low-angst plot. But I also felt like *way* too many problems were solved by magic (and especially by the Magic of Love): by the end, not just the central romance but basically everything in every non-evil character's life is birds-singing-sun-shining perfect, which feels ... wrong ... to me. Also not that into the writing style.
From page one, I was hooked. MJP weaves a brillant love story with great fantasy, making it seem like it's normal, everyday magic instead of a paranormal world. I especially loved how she was able to so deftly combine historical and 'paranormal' romance together, though at times I forgot that it was a paranormal romance.
The story is sweet and tender, loving and passionate, sexy and funny. The characters (That is, the hero and heroine) are anything but perfect and stunningly beautiful, but it doesn't matter because they both love each other anyway and find each other very attractive, both inside and out. What more can you ask for?
Their love runs deep, like their magic, and their connection is there almost from the start, slowing show more building along with their trust and love for each other. To me, that's the most believable kind of love--true love. :) And their love scenes are scorching hot while still retaining a lot of the tender love and connection, the perfect combination, intensified by the fact that the first part of their marriage was filled with nothing but semi-innocent caresses and cuddles, allowing true love to really bloom instead of starting out as really strong lust, like some stories *Though that is not always a bad thing either, in my opinion...it all just depends on the author and the storyline/characters...*
Besides their breath-taking romance that runs deep through the book, The Marriage Spell also has a good touch of mystery and adventure, luaghs and danger. Plus the obvious magic, which fits in nicely, despite the fact that so many peers of the ton are strongly against wizards, but who cares about them, right?
5/5 STARS! This is the perfect romance novel, one of the best I've ever read, and I will definitely be snatching up Mary Jo Puney's other novels as soon as I can! A must read for any romance lover, no matter their preference: Since it's a combination of historical and paranormal, you can't go wrong! show less
The story is sweet and tender, loving and passionate, sexy and funny. The characters (That is, the hero and heroine) are anything but perfect and stunningly beautiful, but it doesn't matter because they both love each other anyway and find each other very attractive, both inside and out. What more can you ask for?
Their love runs deep, like their magic, and their connection is there almost from the start, slowing show more building along with their trust and love for each other. To me, that's the most believable kind of love--true love. :) And their love scenes are scorching hot while still retaining a lot of the tender love and connection, the perfect combination, intensified by the fact that the first part of their marriage was filled with nothing but semi-innocent caresses and cuddles, allowing true love to really bloom instead of starting out as really strong lust, like some stories *Though that is not always a bad thing either, in my opinion...it all just depends on the author and the storyline/characters...*
Besides their breath-taking romance that runs deep through the book, The Marriage Spell also has a good touch of mystery and adventure, luaghs and danger. Plus the obvious magic, which fits in nicely, despite the fact that so many peers of the ton are strongly against wizards, but who cares about them, right?
5/5 STARS! This is the perfect romance novel, one of the best I've ever read, and I will definitely be snatching up Mary Jo Puney's other novels as soon as I can! A must read for any romance lover, no matter their preference: Since it's a combination of historical and paranormal, you can't go wrong! show less
A wonderful read. Although the book jumps at the very beginning (in order to provide some necessary back-story), readers will still get caught up in the interesting re-envisioning of a typical romance setting. Jack and Abby's romance sparkles as they combat the nasty side of magical influence and Jack learns to trust his wife and his own magical talent, solving a mystery at his family estate and healing several deserving (and somewhat less-deserving) folks along the way. A very enjoyable read.
Not my fav, but a nice enjoyable story for reading on the beach. The passages that dealt with magic were a little hokey in my opinion, but I have never much enjoyed the historical romances that incorporate the paranormal. Good characters, fast moving storyline, not a bad way to spend an afternoon
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Romance writer Mary Jo Putney was born in New York and graduated from Syracuse University with degrees in English literature and Industrial design. She served as the art editor of The New Internationalist magazine in London and worked as a designer in California before settling in Baltimore, Maryland in 1980 to run her own freelance graphic design show more business Her first novel was a traditional Regency romance, which sold in one week. Signet liked the novel so much that it offered Putney a three-book contract. In 1987 that first novel, The Diabolical Baron, was published. Since then, she has published more than twenty-nine books. Her books have been ranked on the national bestseller lists of the New York Times, USA Today, and Publishers Weekly. Most of her books have been historical romance. She has also begun writing fantasy romance and romantic fantasy. Putney has won the Romance Writers of America RITA Award twice, for Dancing on the Wind and The Rake and the Reformer and has been a RITA finalist nine times. She is on the Romance Writers of America Honor Roll for bestselling authors, and has been awarded two Romantic Times Career Achievement Awards and four Golden Leaf Awards. Her titles include: Dark Mirror, Dark Passage, No Longer a Gentleman, Never Less than a Lady, and Nowhere Near Respectable. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Belongs to Publisher Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Marriage Spell
- Original publication date
- 2006
- People/Characters
- Abby (Abigail) Barton (Abigail); Jack Langdon, Lord Frayne; Duke of Ashby; Ransome; Lucas Winslow
- Important places
- London, England, UK; Yorkshire, England, UK
- Important events
- Napoleonic Wars
- First words
- "Time to get up, rat!"
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"And I'm lucky, lucky Abby."
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Statistics
- Members
- 357
- Popularity
- 87,937
- Reviews
- 10
- Rating
- (3.51)
- Languages
- English, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 16
- ASINs
- 7





























































