A Knight in Shining Armor by Jude Deveraux
Series: Montgomery/Taggert #15
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication Date: March 27th 2012
Genres: Historical Romance, Time Travel
Pages: 416
Add It: Goodreads
Amazon | Barnes & Noble | The Ripped Bodice | Google Play Books
Once upon a time . . . as a fair maiden lay weeping upon a cold tombstone, her heartfelt desire was suddenly made real before her: tall, broad of shoulder, attired in gleaming silver and gold, her knight in shining armor had come to rescue his damsel in distress. . . .
A Knight in Shining Armor
Hailed worldwide as one of the most romantic novels of all time, Jude Deveraux’s dazzling bestseller “will capture your heart—and hold it” (Daily Herald, Chicago) with its breathtaking tale of lovely Dougless Montgomery; her savior knight, Nicholas Stafford, Earl of Thornwyck; and the timeless adventure of passion and memory, danger and desire that sweeps them into each other’s arms.
Every Thursday in 2018 we will be posting throwback reviews of our favorite and not-so-favorite books.
Holly: Rowena and I got into a discussion about this book on Twitter (caution, thread contains spoilers for this book and others) this week along with some other long-time romance readers. We all agree this is one of the few books that can still fill us with rage even all these years later. I’ll never be over that ending. Never.
I saw a review for this one online a couple of days ago and got mad all over again so I’m going to resurrect this review Holly and I did over at our old blog, Sanctuary’s Finest.
Enjoy!
Rowena says:
Jude Deveraux did such a wonderful job sucking me in with Dougless Montgomery and Nicholas Stafford. I mean, Dougless wanted nothing more than a man, a good man to love and care for her enough to marry her, she strived to have a family of her own with a man who wouldn’t make her look like the insipid younger sister to her family, she didn’t want to be the laughingstock of her family which is understandable and I thought it was so sweet that she asked for a Knight in Shining Armor and got it…in the form of Elizabethan Knight, Nicholas Stafford.
Nicholas Stafford was a rascal of a hero who died long ago and WAS the laughingstock of not only his family but of England. He wanted so much to be remembered for his learning and for his architecture, but instead was remembered as a traitor to his Queen and a sexual exploit of his youth on a table. What a way to be remembered and back in the day, well in Nicholas’ day, all you had to live for was your honor.
Honor made men out of boys and Nicholas’ wanted to be remembered by his mind. He wasn’t perfect by any means (I mean come on now, you slept with a married woman for goodness sakes but still) but he did work hard to supply for his family and he did have a heart, a very big one.
I really loved Nicholas Stafford and I loved the whole story between him and Dougless, they were perfect for eachother, so bloody perfect. The ice cream scene in the kitchen? YUM! I mean, there wasn’t much to love about Dougless and Nicholas because they were both just so loveable. You wanted someone like Dougless as your friend because she cared a whole lot about those around her and she was loyal and just an all around good hearted young woman. Nicholas on the other hand, you wanted Nicholas in your bed, he was hot, he was funny and he was caring. He really was though, just a regular guy with the same goofiness as all of those guys that you can’t help but love.
I can’t tell you guys how great Jude Deveraux did with the telling of this story. The entire time you were rootin’ these two on because you wanted them to have their happy ending. Dougless was a good strong heroine who was soft hearted but worked hard for those around her and then Nicholas, you couldn’t help but fall in love with him, he was just too cute. He too, worked so hard to right the wrongs that were done to him and you really wanted him to find his happy ending…..with Dougless.
Now, JD did a wonderful job with the secondary characters too, you either loved them or you hated them. I mean, with Kit and Lady Margaret, you fell in absolute love with their characters because there was a wealth of love between these two and Nicholas. It was more than aparent that Kit had Nicholas’ back and that he loved his brother with everything, same thing with Lady Margaret, she was a great mother to the two men and she showed that love by fighting for the truth about Nicholas to save him, she was a smart cookie and the bad guys seriously underestimated her abilities to dig out the truth, she was an amazing mother and she was gracious to Dougless for saving both of her sons, I thought that was great.
Now on the flip side of the coin, we have characters like Arabella Sydney who I hated just because she was a little slut that cheated on her husband with Nicholas, stupid chit needed to keep her damn legs closed and work on her marriage to her husband, since that man was one evil ass man. Then you have Robert and Gloria, Dougless’ insufferable boyfriend and his evil spawn of a daughter. Never in my life have I wanted to hurt people more than I wanted to hurt these two, I’m serious because I wanted to stab Robert and keep stabbing him until he had more holes in him than a piece of Swiss Cheese and then I wanted to hang him by his balls and let him bleed out, ever so slowly. You don’t want to know what I wanted to do to his good for nothing little shit of a daughter.
Grrr…
So as you can see, JD did a great job with this book because she got this kind of reaction out of me, always looking on the bright side Rowena, that’s me. If a book is bad, I’ll overlook it if I enjoyed the story as a whole, oh but not this time around. Not with this book, this book infuriated me so much that I am going to burn this shit in the Burn Book pile, oh wait…I already did that, but this time I’m going to keep it in the burn pile.
You see, as much as I loved the story, I hated the ending, the ending is what burned the book, ruined it for me, but aside from that horrendous ending, the book was FABULOUS!
Holly says:
I couldn’t agree with Rowena more. When we first meet Douglass she’s on her way to England for a vacation with her stupid cad boyfriend and his stupid, spoiled daughter, and as a reader, you want so much for her to find true love and happiness, because she’s the type that deserves it.
As a member of the overachieving Montgomery clan, Douglass has always felt inferior to the rest of her family and she truly just wants to be loved and accepted for who she is, and not reminded of the mistakes she’s made. As a woman, a sister and a mother, I totally identified with her.
When she was weeping on the steps of the church because her jerkass boyfriend had abandoned her in a foreign country, I wept with her. And when Nicholas Stafford was brought forward through time as her Knight in Shining Armor, I cried harder and wanted so much for them to be together. I cried again when Nicholas was sent back home and I prayed Douglass would find a way to be with him again.
I cheered when Douglass went back to Nicholas’ time and I was on the edge of my seat with anticipation, waiting to see how the story would unfold. Would Nicholas remember Douglass from when he was in the future? Would his family come to accuse her of being a witch? Would Nicholas fall in love with the Douglass in his time, or remember he loved her in her time? Would he still marry the psycho that got him into trouble before?
The scenes Rowena mentioned, like the ice cream scene, were amazingly told. I was completely wrapped up in this story, breathless with anticipation and almost sick to my stomach wondering how JD was going to keep these two amazing characters together. I just wanted them to have their HEA….together.
Conclusion: With Spoilers…you were warned!
View Spoiler »Dammit. And Double Dammit. There’s no redeeming this book at all. No matter how I look at it, it sucked ass, plain and simple.
Stupid ass book!
Story: 4 Ending: 1
This book is available from Simon & Schuster . You can buy it here or here in e-format.
so…
*shuffling feet*
Will you ladies hate me if I tell you I love this book anyway?
*slinking off*
Really? Aww, that’s disappointing because I have it in my TBR pile. And I’m being bullied by my friends to read it ~ saying it’s one of JD’s best. But, I’m a fan of the HEA. If I can’t have it, chances are I won’t read it.
OMG Holly you’re so freakin funny! I love this review…if I read this book I would say the same thing. There’s no way I would have liked that ending. Reminds me of another book where she went back in time and they fell in love and then he rode off, she went back to her time and fell in love with one of his relatives? WTF??? I hate endings like that!
I read this way, way, way back when I was still a little Missy — and she hated that end with a fiery, fiery passion.
I still do. The book was great; the ending left a scar on my poor little heart.
The book was great; the ending left a scar on my poor little heart.
Exactly, Meljean. My heart still bleeds when I think about this ending.
Honestly, I would have had more respect for her if she’d left them alone at the end. Nicholas in his time and Douglas(s – is it 1 S or 2?) in hers, both of them content in the knowledge that they had loved, and loved well. Yes, it would have meant there was no real HEA, but I feel like JD just handed us readers a bone, knowing we’d demand something.
On the other hand, I haven’t re-read this book in years, and yet I still get worked up. So, perhaps JD isn’t so stupid after all?
Tracy,
Was that book by Jasmine Cresswell? I think I might have read it. LOL
Dev,
It IS her best book. Which really says something, if you ask me. LOL
AL,
I still love you, but we’ll just have to agree to disagree on this one. 😛
You totally convinced me to never read this book. Would you believe if I told you I sort of cried by reading your rant about poor Nicholas dying all alone? LOL.
*humbly* Thank you, Holly.
But you make great points, actually. I still love the book simply because, even though it’s been years since the last time I even touched it, I remember so many passages and details and the emotions I felt while reading it.
Both Nicholas and Dougless stay with you, and you keep aching for them to be happy.
That’s great writing, isn’t it?
Actually Holly it was called His and Hers by Dawn Calvert. It wasn’t a bad book at all. I just hated the ending.
The ending definitively sucked, however the book was good… Sigh, what can you do? Maybe we could petition for her to re-write then ending, LOL 😛
I’m staying away. Just commenting to let you know “no comment.”
LMAO
THANK YOU!! I’ve been looking all over for a spoiler ending to this book. And now I know I never have to read the book because there’s NO WAY I would like an ending like that!
I kept hearing how much better this book was then Johanna Lindsey’s Until Forever (whose ending wasn’t nearly as bad as this one and I still didn’t like it), but I wasn’t willing to try JD out without knowing the ending. And good thing too.
And to all those people who like it more than JLs book, you’re crazy! At least Roseleen stays with the sort-of same guy (that’s how I choose to interpret the ending) not someone else entirely (soul shmoul)!
still a good book to me…
I have memory issues, I remember reading a book a long time ago with a scene were the heroine was showering in the castle courtyard, not knowing people could see her. Was this in this book? Trying to find that book again. Was a time travel book.