
Christian wasn't precisely glad to be alive. Surviving torture turned a man into a ghost toting a bag of memories that could not be shared, and inhabiting a body no longer reliable or easily maintained. That body after torture, did not sleep well, did not exert itself unproblematically, did not ingest food easily, and certainly could not be relied upon to deal with amatory pastimes--not that Christian would be indulging in any of those.
Not soon. Not immediately.
But the hour he'd spent with his daughter made it plain that the child, at least, was delighted her papa had survived, and this changed the complexion of Christian's existence.
.
Ms. Burrowes drew me into this complex story with her characters. The first few chapters of the novel are intense, dark and at the same time very compelling. Christian was both a nobleman and an officer. Why wasn't he rescued? What was the motive behind the capture, the torture and starvation?

Each of the main characters was held captive in the story. During his imprisonment, Christian refused to speak and focused on revenge to get through the torture and humiliation. Gilly suffered in silence. Lucy withdrew into her own silent world after her mother's death.
Looking forward to The Traitor, the second book in the series.
Reviewed by Susan Gorman
This review by Susan Gorman originally appeared at Fresh Fiction.
I will have to read this book! I've enjoyed her Lonely Lords series so far.
ReplyDeleteI am enjoying the Lonely Lords, too. I like each story. My favorite GB character is Devlin St Just and he appears in this novel. Missy thanks for stopping by....have a great holiday weekend!
DeleteAwesome review Sue! I have this book here. And it has just moved ahead in the line up of my reading material.
ReplyDeleteLisa-- thank you! I know you will enjoy The Captive!
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