The Governess Game (Tessa Dare)

The Governess Game
Author:
Publisher:
Published: 8/28/2018
He’s been a bad, bad rake—and it takes a governess to teach him a lesson The accidental governess. After her livelihood slips through her fingers, Alexandra Mountbatten takes on an impossible post: transforming a pair of wild orphans into proper young ladies. However, the girls don’t need discipline. They need a loving home. Try telling that to their guardian, Chase Reynaud: duke’s heir in the streets and devil in the sheets. The ladies of London…

Note: I received this an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Overall Response

I actually read this in about two hours on Monday, the day my request to review it was approved. There were lots of squeeing and happy sounds — and then of course, I couldn’t write my review right away because it be a lot of gifs of hearts and exclamation points. I wanted to take a day, reread some parts of it and try to be a bit more objective.

We first met Alexandra Mountbatten in The Duchess Deal, and to be honest, the only thing I remembered about her was that she set clocks. I reread The Duchess Deal to see if I had missed anything and it turns out the prologue from this book is a scene in Deal. I had forgotten that 😛 So we actually meet Chase Reynaud at that point.

This is one of the delightful books where the romance is the plot driving the story forward, so when I talk about the plot, I’m also talking about the romance. There’s a lot here to like. Alexandra is a sweet heroine who you immediately root for because she has the sort of fantasies I’ve had. She meets Chase in a bookstore, but no names are exchanged and she thinks about it a lot — so much that when Chase does introduce himself, she immediately in her mind, thinks about her name if they were married.

I don’t care how old you are, that’s something you can relate to. Even today when women don’t change their names as often. We all doodled it on our notebooks. I filled notebooks in my first grade composition book with my crush’s name and a heart. Page and page. For two years. So yeah, right from the start, Alexandra was my spirit animal.

Chase is a bit more foggy. He seems to live a dual life of dissipation and reluctantly affectionate guardian. He spends the first 75% of the book claiming he doesn’t have any affection for Rosamund and Daisy, but he trudges off every morning to eulogize a doll that Daisy keeps killing off with some sort of disease. Chase has a seriously low opinion of himself (like criminally low) and I’m not entirely convinced it comes from what happened with his cousin. He is, however, delightfully charming and that takes care of a lot.

The supporting cast is great. We get more Nicola and Penny, and now I’m salivating for their books because they are so quirky and sweet and supportive that I want them to have HEAs too. Tomorrow. I love John Barrow, Chase’s solicitor and illegitimate half-brother. He keeps Chase grounded. I love Ash coming back with his Shakespearean curses. And Rosamund and Daisy are the best. I hope that I get to see how they turn out.

The romance is well-done and takes the twists and turns one would expect. Nothing surprises you in this book, but that’s not a bad thing. One of the things I hate is constant twists and turns when there’s no reason for this. This is just two slightly damaged people coming together and figuring out they’re not that damaged at all. I’m here for the journey, and I don’t mind predictability. I love the astronomy in this story, and Chase’s support of things he doesn’t even really understand.

This is a really sweet book that I would happily recommend to anyone who will listen (and will, I promise you that).

Spoilers Ahead

I think there are only a few things that keep this book from being perfect, and really — it’s mostly just because I’m writing reviews and trying to be objective. The fogginess of Chase’s background doesn’t really support his insanely low opinion of himself. I know he holds himself responsible for his cousin and Ash comes crashing into talk about the rumors, but I guess…that wasn’t enough for me. I don’t know. It’s hard to articulate it. I also think maybe Rosamund and Daisy were supposed to be this unholy duo of terrors that chased governesses away, but they didn’t really do much to Alexandra.

And the other thing that kind of got stuck for me is that Chase remembered Alexandra from their interaction at Hatchards. It’s not that I don’t think he would have–I just didn’t entirely like finding it out at the end of the book. I wish there’d been some more hints of it, if that makes sense.

All of that only costs this book half a star, and everywhere else I review it will see it have the full five stars because this is not a four star book. I loved Chase and Alex, and I want to see them pop up in the rest of the series. This was a reallly good book.

4.7Overall Score

The Governess Game

Note: I received this an ARC in exchange for an honest review. Overall Response I actually read this in about two hours on Monday, the day my request to review it was approved. There were ...

  • Plot
    4.5
  • Characters
    4.5
  • Romance
    5.0

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