The Grand Sophy

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The Grand Sophy
GrandSophy.jpg
First edition
Author Georgette Heyer
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Regency, Romance
Publisher William Heinemann
Publication date
1950
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 336 pp

The Grand Sophy is a Regency romance novel by Georgette Heyer. It was first published in 1950 by Heinemann in the UK and Putnam in the U.S. The story is set in 1816.[1]

Plot summary

For the past several years Sophia Stanton-Lacy (known as Sophy to everyone) has lived away from England, following her diplomat father Sir Horace around Europe while the Napoleonic Wars raged on. Now that the Battle of Waterloo is over and Napoleon has once again been exiled, her father receives a temporary post in South America. Instead of taking his daughter with him to the new continent, he asks his sister, Lady Ombersley, to watch over his "little Sophy" and help find her a husband. However, "little Sophy" is nothing like anyone expected. 5'9" in her stockings and quite used to getting her own way after a lifetime in a household with no mother, no governess, and wartime liberties, she is outgoing, chic, and quite independent, taking the town by storm with her unconventional manner.

Though most of her cousins take to her on sight, her autocratic cousin, Charles Rivenhall, is immediately frustrated and annoyed. Having been raised with a passive, sickly mother and an intemperate, gambling addict father, Charles has assumed since a young age the role of the adult in the household. forced by his father's debt to shoulder the family finances, resents the disruption by his lively and confident cousin of what has become, in all but name, his household. With Charles encouraged in domestic tyranny by his spiteful fiancée, Miss Eugenia Wraxton, Sophy and Charles begin a battle of wills. Soon after her arrival, Sophy realizes that all is not well in the Rivenhall household and proceeds to solve the various problems of the family with her trademark flair, saving her cousin Hubert from a moneylender, arranging through an involved and hilarious scheme her cousin Cecilia's extraction from her infatuation with (and later engagement to) a poet, and promoting her marriage to the eligible Lord Charlbury, the man favored by her brother and parents and ultimately, the man that Cecelia discovers she loves.

Slowly, much to the consternation of them both, Sophy and Charles find themselves falling in love, with Sophy's devilry lightening his dictatorial tendencies. In the end, at the successful conclusion of her incredibly audacious scheme to unite Cecilia and Charlbury and free Rivenhall from his obligations to his fiancée, Rivenhall proposes, with Sophy accepting.

Characters

Sophia (Sophy) Stanton-Lacy - the eponymous heroine, 20.

Sir Horace Stanton-Lacy - a diplomat, father of Sophy.

Charles Rivenhall - hero, 26, Heir to Matthew Rivenhall's fortune.

Lady Elizabeth Ombersley - long-suffering mother to Charles and wife to Lord Ombersley.

Lord Ombersley - Charles' father, who spends most of his time at his club.

Miss Eugenia Wraxton - Charles' fiancée, daughter of Lord Brinklow, a viscount.

Lord Bromford

Goldhanger - A Jewish moneylender. The passage with Goldhanger is criticised as anti-semitic, and has been cut from some editions.[2]

Cecelia Rivenhall - Charles' sister, 18, a debutante.

Lord Charlebury - 30, succumbed to mumps while courting Cecelia.

Augustus Fawnhope - a handsome poet.

Hubert Rivenhall - Charles' teenage brother, up at Oxford.

Amabel Rivenhall - a schoolroom miss, 10

Gertrude Rivenhall - a schoolroom miss, 12

Selina Rivenhall - a schoolroom miss, 16

Theodore Rivenhall - at Eton

Miss Adderbury - the Rivenhall's governess

Alfred Wraxton - brother of Eugenia

The Marquesa - a spanish Marquesa betrothed to Sir Horace

Dasett - The Rivenhall's butler

Jacko - a monkey

Tina - Sophy's dog, an Italian greyhound, which inexplicably likes Charles Rivenhall

Salamanca - Sophy's horse, which Sophy commits the solecism of riding at a gallop in the park

References

  1. See http://www.georgette-heyer.com/chron.html
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