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Book Reviews of The Georgette Heyer Omnibus: Faro's Daughter / The Corinthian / The Nonesuch

The Georgette Heyer Omnibus: Faro's Daughter / The Corinthian / The Nonesuch
The Georgette Heyer Omnibus Faro's Daughter / The Corinthian / The Nonesuch
Author: Georgette Heyer
ISBN-13: 9780525112655
ISBN-10: 0525112650
Publication Date: 8/1973
Pages: 665
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 3

4 stars, based on 3 ratings
Publisher: E. P. Dutton
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

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copiousreader avatar reviewed The Georgette Heyer Omnibus: Faro's Daughter / The Corinthian / The Nonesuch on
This omnibus has the following three of Georgette Heyer's stories and has 665 pages

FARO'S DAUGHTER - Deborah Grantham, niece of the notorious Lady Bellingham, runs the faro table in her aunt's London gaming house. She proves to be as clever at dealing with her suitors as she is with cards. The suspicious Mr. Ravenscar, who thinks Deborah is scheming to marry his much younger cousin, decides that the only way to get Deborah to leave the susceptible Lord Mablethorpe alone is to buy her off. But she is not the sort of girl he thinks she is.

THE CORINTHAIN - when Sir Richard Wyndham, fashionable young man-about-town and in every sense a true Corinthian, first meets Penelope Creed, he is on his way home from a London club --and quite drunk. She in turn is busily engaged in climbing out of a window in her aunt's house. The sheets Penelope has knotted together for her hasty exit are too short and she asks Sir Richard for help. The plot thickens when they discover they are both in the same predicament--being forced into marriage against their will.

THE NONESUCH - "Georgette Heyer, past mistress of the frothy comedy of manners played out against the backdrop of early 19th-century England, is at her frothy best in this latest of her costume romances. As the tale winds along to a happy conclusion in the best Heyer tradition, all the good characters win out, all the bad ones are put in their places, and the reader has an enchanting evening." Chicago Tribune