Spindle Cove Series: A Week to Be Wicked by Tessa Dare

Road trip!

I first read A Week to Be Wicked about two years ago when I started devouring every historical romance I could get my hands on. It is a wonderful romp and an entertaining read. It hits on all of Tessa Dare’s best aspects as a writer:

  1. Smolder. Really, really, good smolder. Lisa Kleypas level smolder.
  2. Funny of the laugh out loud variety. Witty, too.
  3. Sincere emotion successfully balanced against the aforementioned humour.
  4. At least one hysterical turn of phrase describing a man’s specific firmness.
  5. Sincerely besotted heroes falling for wallflowers.
  6. Likeable, emphatically capable heroines.
  7. A strain on your willing suspension of disbelief which will almost always be worth it.               (Let us not speak of that time it wasn’t.)

Minerva Highwood and her family are living in remote Spindle Cove (coincidentally the name of this series) as her sister recovers from an illness. The ignored middle child, Minerva is bespectacled and bookish as opposed to her beautiful inside and out sister, Diana, and her precocious younger sibling, Charlotte. Sadly for Minerva, she is not quite ignored enough by her ambitious mother who never loses an opportunity to find Min inadequate in comparison with just about anyone. Minerva is a scientist at a time when such things were nigh on impossible for a woman, but the isolation of Spindle Cove affords her the opportunity to indulge her passion for geology. Minerva has found what the reader recognizes as evidence of prehistoric fauna and has been asked to present her findings to the Royal Geological Society in Edinburgh. There are only two problems a. they don’t know she’s a woman and b. getting there. Spindle Cove affords but one possible escort. One person whose magical combination of maleness and a lack of scruples will suit her purpose.

Colin Sandhurst, Lord Payne, is a well-intentioned, disillusioned rake. He is gorgeous, loquacious, and his best laid plans always go awry. Minerva approaches him with a promise of the money he will need to leave Spindle Cove and lounge in London until his inheritance kicks in. Being a rogue, Colin has some conditions for his company, the most interesting of which is that Minerva must sleep in his bed as he is an insomniac and prone to nightmares when he does get to sleep. A warm female body close to hand soothes him.

Feigning an elopement, Colin and Minerva head for Scotland and, as is the case with fictional road trips, whatever can go wrong, does, and the love-hate attraction they have always felt for each other chooses a side. A Regency romance with a vacillating grasp on reality, A Week to Be Wicked is tremendously entertaining and maintains a genuine sweetness despite the spiraling chain of events.

A complete summary of Tessa Dare’s catalogue, with recommendations, can be found here.

Links to my other reviews can be found on my complete reading list of books sorted by author or Author Commentary & The Tallies Shameful.

5 thoughts on “Spindle Cove Series: A Week to Be Wicked by Tessa Dare

  1. Malin February 16, 2014 at 9:46 pm Reply

    Seeing your list of her novels just reminded me that there are still three Tessa Dare books I haven’t read. Her interestingly titled Wanton Dairymaid trilogy, which I believe are also her first books. Probably won’t be great, but I feel compelled to seek them out at some point to see what they’re like.

  2. Mrs. Julien February 16, 2014 at 11:04 pm Reply

    Those are on my list, too. C’mon cheap on Amazon!

  3. Sarah June 3, 2014 at 8:41 pm Reply

    I quite liked that whole series, read them a few times. I thought they were much better than The Stud Club books

    • Mrs. Julien June 4, 2014 at 9:40 am Reply

      I agree, I felt like the Stud Club series was when she was settling in as a writer and then the Spindle Cove books were where she found her groove. I am, um, not as fond of the direction of her new series, even if it does consist of just one book so far.

      • Sarah June 6, 2014 at 12:23 am

        Yeaaaah I’ve been hoping that one was a bit of a fluke. Let’s cross our fingers that the rest of the series goes a little better, shall we?

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