The Sugar Pavilion

by Rosalind Laker

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During the French Revolution, Sophie Delcourt and Antoine, a four-year-old French noble, escape to England, where Sophie must guard Antoine's identity while she builds a confectionary business, joins the British royal circle, and comes to love two very different men.

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The Sugar Pavilion by Rosalind Laker is both a well written and thoroughly researched historical novel with the hard-working, independent, and beautiful Sophie Delcourt as it’s main character. Sophie trained under her father to be a highly accomplished confectioner and when she is forced to flee France during the Revolution, she guides and protects a young heir of an aristocratic family. Keeping his identity a secret so that his enemies cannot trace him, she raises the boy as a nephew.

Sophie settles in Brighton and experiences many adventures, dangers and career opportunities as well as love. Brighton in the late 1770’s was becoming a resort city, greatly favoured by the Prince of Wales and the woman he has secretly married, Maria show more Fitzherbert. Brighton was also a well known smuggling destination and this also plays a part in the story. But for me, the descriptions of how the complex bonbons, sweetmeats and elaborate spun-sugar centerpieces were made was the most fascinating part of the book.

The title, The Sugar Pavilion refers to the Royal Pavilion that the Prince of Wales had built as his seaside retreat. Set in this colourful epoch of Brighton’s history, the author wisely keeps this period-romance from becoming too sweet, and although at times her vivid descriptions of food and fashion did tend to slow the story down, I found this information very interesting. While this story isn’t up to the level of Jane Austen or Georgette Heyer, I enjoyed my time spent with it and would certainly read more from this author.
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Laker's tale of Sophie Delcourt starts in 1793 at the height of the French Revolution as Sophie is forced to flee to England with her employer's young son Antoine de Juneau and his aging grandfather, as the revolutionaries hunt down and kill any members of the aristocracy they can find. Sophie reaches England in safety by is set upon by villains who attack her party and rob them of everything and leave them for dead. Found by the gorgeous (of course) and mysterious (of course) Tom Foxhill she eventually recovers from the attack and she and Antoine settle in Brighton, England with young Antoine posing as Sophie's nephew. Sophie uses her skills as a confectionery to establish a business in her new life as she is torn by her strong show more attractions to Tom as opposed to the quiet but strong and loving revenue agent, Rory Morgan.

Laker mixes Sophie's tale in with one of George, then Prince of Wales, and his "wife" Maria Fitzherbert and their on again off again relationship. I have to admit sometimes it was a bit of a stretch the way commoner Sophie was able to step in and out of George's and Maria's lives without so much of a raising of an eyebrow, but otherwise this was a genuinely entertaining tale. As Sophie battles to maintain her independence while being courted by two men who love her, danger from France threatens as a relative of the de Juneau's plots to harm Julian and remove any possibility of his laying claim to his rightful inheritance in France.

The author does a nice job of setting her scenes and includes plenty of period detail, with the clothes, food, etc. To some readers it may be a bit much and it does slow the story down at times, so you're not going to have a sit on the edge of your seat page turning story, but one to sit back and savor at a leisurely pace. Not the greatest entry in the historical fiction genre, but still a pleasant way to spend an afternoon in another century.
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58+ Works 1,818 Members
Barbara Ovstedal was born on October 3, 1921 in Bognor Regis. She wrote a few romances under the pseudonym Barbara Paul, but changed to Rosalind Laker when Barbara Paul gained recognition. Her books included Sovereign's Key, Far Seeks the Heart, Warwyck's Woman, The Venetian Mask, Circle of Pearls, The Fragile Hour, and The Golden Tulip. Under her show more own name, Ovstedal has written a travel book about Norway, as well as several novels, including Red Cherry Summer, Valley of the Reindeer, and Souvenir of Sweden. She died on November 23, 2012 at the age of 91. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Canonical title
The Sugar Pavilion

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Historical Fiction, Romance, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6065 .E9 .S84Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000

Statistics

Members
81
Popularity
393,370
Reviews
2
Rating
½ (4.29)
Languages
English, French, Portuguese
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
10
ASINs
1