Everlasting
Everlasting book cover

Everlasting

Mass Market Paperback – November 25, 2008

Price
$8.99
Publisher
Avon
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0060545536
Dimensions
4.19 x 0.96 x 6.75 inches
Weight
6.6 ounces

Description

Once, Abrielle was a privileged daughter coveted for her bearing, her breeding, her wit, and her beauty. But when her stepfather is denied his rightful title and the wealth that accompanies it, Abrielle finds herself suddenly disgraced. Only one man would still have her: the oafish and grotesque Desmond de Marlé. To rescue her once-proud family's honor, Abrielle must sacrifice her virtue to this scoundrel she fears and detests . . . even as she yearns for another lover. Dashing, handsome, tall, and kind, Raven Seabern is quite unlike any man Abrielle has ever encountered. But their love can never be, for Abrielle is betrothed to a monster. And the well-being of everyone she cares for demands that she honor her promise. Still, Raven knows he has found the true one and must never let her go—though secrets, deceptions, dishonor, and unimaginable peril will surely be their fate if they follow the dictates of their hearts. (1939 - 2007) Kathleen E. Woodiwiss, creator of the modern historical romance, died July 6, 2007 in Minnesota. She had just turned 68. Her attorney, William Messerlie, said that she died after a long illness. Born on June 3, 1939 in Alexandria, Louisiana, Mrs. Woodiwiss was the youngest of eight siblings. She long relished creating original narratives, and by age six was telling herself stories at night to help herself fall asleep. At age 16, she met U.S. Air Force Second Lieutenant Ross Woodiwiss at a dance, and they married the following year. She wrote her first book in longhand while living at a military outpost in Japan. Woodiwiss is credited with the invention of the modern historical romance novel: in 1972, she released The Flame and the Flower , an instant New York Times bestseller, creating literary precedent. The Flame and the Flower revolutionized mainstream publishing, featuring an epic historical romance with a strong heroine and impassioned sex scenes. "Kathleeen E. Woodiwiss is the founding mother of the historical romance genre," says Carrie Feron, vice president/editorial director of William Morrow and Avon Books, imprints of HarperCollins Publishers. Feron, who has been Woodiwiss's editor for 13 years, continues, "Avon Books is proud to have been Kathleen's sole publishing partner for her paperbacks and hardcover novels for more than three decades." Avon Books, a leader in the historical romance genre to this day, remains Mrs. Woodiwiss's original and only paperback publisher; William Morrow, Avon's sister company, publishes Mrs. Woodiwiss's hardcovers. The Flame and the Flower was rejected by agents and hardcover publishers, who deemed it as "too long" at 600 pages. Rather than follow the advice of the rejection letters and rewrite the novel, Mrs. Woodiwiss instead submitted it to paperback publishers. The first publisher on her list, Avon, quickly purchased the novel and arranged an initial 500,000 print run. The novel sold over 2.3 million copies in its first four years of publication. The success of this novel prompted a new style of writing romance, concentrating primarily on historical fiction tracking the monogamous relationship between a helpless heroines and the hero who rescued her, even if he had been the one to place her in danger. The romance novels which followed in her example featured longer plots, more controversial situations and characters, and more intimate and steamy sex scenes. "Her words engendered an incredible passion among readers," notes Feron. Bestselling author Julia Quinn agrees, saying, "Woodiwiss made women want to read. She gave them an alternative to Westerns and hard-boiled police procedurals. When I was growing up, I saw my mother and grandmother reading and enjoying romances, and when I was old enough to read them myself, I felt as if I had been admitted into a special sisterhood of reading women." New York Times bestselling author Susan Elizabeth Phillips, a leading voice in the women's fiction arena, says, "We all owe our careers to her. She opened the world of romance to us as readers. She created a career for us to go into." The pioneering author has written 13 novels over the course of 35 years, all New York Times bestsellers. Kathleen E. Woodiwiss's final literary work, the upcoming Everlasing , will be published by William Morrow in October 2007. " Everlasting is Kathleen's final gift to her fans," notes Feron. Kathleen E. Woodiwiss, who was predeceased by her husband and son Dorren, is survived by sons Sean and Heath, and numerous grandchildren.

Features & Highlights

  • Once, Abrielle was a privileged daughter coveted for her bearing, her breeding, her wit, and her beauty. But when her stepfather is denied his rightful title and the wealth that accompanies it, Abrielle finds herself suddenly disgraced. Only one man would still have her: the oafish and grotesque Desmond de Marlé. To rescue her once-proud family's honor, Abrielle must sacrifice her virtue to this scoundrel she fears and detests . . . even as she yearns for another lover.
  • Dashing, handsome, tall, and kind, Raven Seabern is quite unlike any man Abrielle has ever encountered. But their love can never be, for Abrielle is betrothed to a monster. And the well-being of everyone she cares for demands that she honor her promise. Still, Raven knows he has found the true one and must never let her go—though secrets, deceptions, dishonor, and unimaginable peril will surely be their fate if they follow the dictates of their hearts.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(443)
★★★★
25%
(369)
★★★
15%
(221)
★★
7%
(103)
23%
(339)

Most Helpful Reviews

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I was sad that this was her last book

I've been a fan of Kathleen E. Woodiwiss since my twins were starting kindergarten, and they are now in their middle forties. I had already collected all of her books, beginning with The Flame and The Flower, but I didn't have her last one, so I really needed it after I found out that she had passed away from cancer. I was sad that this was her last book. If you like reading Romance, Kathleen E. Woodiwiss was the best.
25 people found this helpful
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Woodiwiss didn't get to finish it.

I haven't read romance novels in many decades, but when Kathleen Woodiwiss died recently, I had to get her last book just because I bought her first one back in the '70s and I was in the grip of nostalgia. I agree with the fans who were disappointed with Everlasting. It was not up to the Woodiwiss standard - and for good reason. Kathleen Woodiwiss didn't live long enough to do what is the most important part of writing a book - the editing and rewrites. To quote from a letter by her son Heath, as published on the Susan Wiggs website:
"Her final book is done, but not finished. We will be trying to polish it up for her. Her editor at Harper Collins has been a great source of stress for my Mom and the rest of us as well, so I am not sure how that will work out, but we are trying to get the book published as fast as possible. We all want this to be her greatest book ever."
So her son and unspecified others (we) are the ones who took Kathleen's raw book and "polished" it for her posthumously and under duress from her publisher. What a shame. We certainly can't blame Kathleen for the book that resulted from those circumstances. Let it be.
13 people found this helpful
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4 and 1/2 stars - a great Medieval Romance

While I did not rate this as high as her other medieval romance, The Wolf and the Dove, I truly enjoyed this story of Raven Seabern, the handsome black-haired, blue-eyed son of a Scottish laird (the father reminded me of an older Sean Connery), who is a messenger for King David of Scotland and trusted by King Henry. He meets Abrielle, a red haired Saxon beauty, in Henry's court just after her stepfather, a faithful Norman knight, is passed over by Henry for the reward he justly deserved. Suddenly Abrielle is no longer pursued by the eligible young suitors for she will have no dowry of land or title. And, worse, in order to save her family from ruin, she agrees to wed the evil and ugly Desmond de Marle who has lusted after her even before her betrothed was mysteriously killed. Raven watches from the sidelines as all this is happening for he is already in love with the fair Abrielle and will not leave her. This is a tale of the time when there were still difficulties between Normans and Saxons and also between England and the Scots. But against that background, there is the prospect of true love conquering all. And so it does.

This was Woodiwiss' last romance, published in 2007, and while not as sweeping or detailed in scope, nor frankly as good as her others, it is still a fine medieval love story and I recommend it.

Here's a list of her other novels:

Birmingham Family Saga Series:

The Flame and the Flower, 1972
A Season Beyond a Kiss, 2000
The Elusive Flame, 1998

Single Novels:

Wolf and the Dove, 1974
Shanna, 1977
Ashes in the Wind, 1979
A Rose in Winter, 1981
Come Love a Stranger, 1984
So Worthy My Love, 1989
Forever in Your Embrace, 1992
Petals on the River, 1997
The Reluctant Suitor, 2002

Her best ones were written in the 70s and 80s, with this perhaps an exception.
11 people found this helpful
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Long, boring, and wordy

This novel was unbelievably boring and pointless. The heroine's reasons for rejecting the hero were just dumb and could have been fixed by her listening for five minutes to any other character in the book. It took almost 200 pages to get rid of the odious fiance who you knew had to die by page 9. Abrielle was not a sympathetic figure in any way and she doesn't grow or change at all over the course of 386 pages. Raven wasn't much better, his line of thought through the entire book is: "I must have Abrielle". His plan was to wait around until he has to save her from dastardly villains (lost count at 6 times). I only finished this book because I was stuck on a plane, and then only be reading 1 out of ever 5 pages.
8 people found this helpful
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Dreadful book

What a shame that this is the final book for an author who wrote some really fabulous stories. Not that the history is usually great in these books, but it seems like we have Jane Austen's social mores in 12th century England. Not likely. The dialogue is horrendous, the prose bloated with overwrought and poorly chosen adjectives, the characters silly. Shame on the family and publisher for printing such drivel, which hardly serves the author's memory very well. Although her writing had gone downhill in later books, this was beyond the pale.
5 people found this helpful
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Two stars for Raven Seabern, 0 for the book

I generally enjoy Kathleen Woodiwiss, so I was pretty excited to see a new book in print. The back cover made it sound as if it was going to be a really touching love story, so half of these reviewers understand my disappointment. I had all kinds of problems with this book. It started out well enough. Abrielle, because of family circumstances, has to marry some disgusting, fat, vile man (Desmond) to save the family. But then there is Raven Seabern, the man who she really wants. During Abrielle's very first, and I might add very frightening, encounter with Desmond, she is rescued by the noble, and beautiful, knight Raven Seabern, who has been completely devoted to her since he laid eyes on her for the first time. Not only does the man rescue her, but then he sits outside her bedroom all night to be sure she remains safe. Then he rescues her once more on her wedding night. Suddenly, she finds herself a wealthy widow, and she seems to turn from this sweet young woman into a haughty, arrogant, much too full of herself b--ch who decides Raven only wants her for her money, and I quote, "..a man who had only showed his devotion once she had wealth." Ridiculous, given that the man has followed her around like a love-sick puppy since the beginning of the book. And now that she is a wealthy widow, EVERYBODY wants her, but she's only resentful toward that poor guy. Even though she's now a snot to him, he STILL rescues her once again from another harrowing situation, and instead of being grateful, she's full of "anger and resentment" because they'd been caught in a compromising position, which really wasn't anyone's fault, and beyond the man's control, and now they must marry. The icing on the cake was when she decided the prospect of a union between her and Raven was more dreaded and feared than the one between her and Desmond. She apparently preferred the fat, mean, vile Desmond over the young, gorgeous Raven, a man who'd always been kind to her. My other problems with the book was that Abrielle was, as one reviewer said, one dimensional, a shallow woman, the characters had no depth (except Raven, which is why the book got 2 stars), and it seemed as if KW was just trying to fill in pages and it ended up being a lot of dumb, boring nonsense. I haven't finished the book, but I will. I imagine Abrielle will eventually decide Raven is worthy of her love, and they will live happily ever after, but after the way she treated him throughout most of the book, I was kind of hoping he might ditch her for someone who appreciated him. It was, all in all, a frustrating, boring read.
5 people found this helpful
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Wish there were a sequel!

This being my first real visit to Romance Genre Land, I am pleasantly surprised to not find it filled with what I thought would be half-naked Fabios & fainting women. Rather it was endearing, well-written, & the characters neither racy nor weak. There was a scene of bodice ripping, but I'll let it slide since it was presented in context with the scene. I feel fortunate to have chosen this book at random from my library when I decided to give the romance genre a test, because Woodiwiss was instrumental in the rebirth of the genre in the 1970s.

The story surrounds Abrielle who is married off to the disgusting Desmond de Marlé, to save her family from financial ruin while she longs for another man. Not just any man of course, a highlander with raven hair (coincidentally named Raven), blue eyes, & impeccably chivalrous manners. Well, aside from the wanton staring he does at her! I really can't do this book any justice in my descriptions, I'm probably putting people off from buying it (or borrowing it from the library). For technicality, it was well written, with each character standing on their own, & the plot seemed to flow very well.

If you like hunky Scotsmen who are more than willing to help a lady in need & you like your heroines a bit sassy, but not obnoxiously so, this is the book for you.
3 people found this helpful
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Love Found In Such Peril ....

Sadly the peril was the heroines own doing. Abrielle was a beauty and was hoping to have her choice in man she wanted to marry but turn of events change and she is forced to wed an ogre of a man , a man she detests. Desmond de Marle.
Raven is daring and handsome and he sets his heart on Abrielle , who is determined to keep her oath to her grotesque betrothed . Raven fights for her , saves her and loves her in on breathe. Abrielle thinks that he only is after her newly found wealth. Makes for a good love story and misunderstandings and the heated sexual tension right? Sorry to disappoint, Abrielle stuck me dumbfounded , she kept saying that Raven didn't court her the first time he saw her WOW can I say that she was a little conceited much .. Anyway at every turn she is either being kidnapped almost raped and the one guy that didn't court her was there to always save her. Minus points for Abrielle. Raven on the other was love struck and followed her around and he vowed that she would be his added points to Raven and his everlasting love to a woman that in my opinion didn't deserve it...

That said I love KEW I have read all her books except two which I will get soon to finish out my collection of KEW books. KEW descriptions of times past . And love found has my heart yearning for more . In her last book Everlasting I found myself skipping pages instead of making every word I read count . My stomach couldn't take all the countless peril that was in store for them . The bounds that Raven went to get the beauty to love him served him well cause in the end she does.. .
3 people found this helpful
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Don't waste your money -- read it from the library.

I love Kathleen E. Woodiwiss's books, but this one has been so hard to get through. At some points, I think I would rather be reading a book on Latin or something because it would be more interesting.

While the main characters have all of the qualities we love in Kathleen's characters, the story itself dulls them down. Although the story moves quickly, there is a lot of detail that I find myself skimming through until the next place that has conversation. I realize that this was her last book and wonder if the lack of usual Woodiwiss polish that makes her stories pageturners is missing due to her dying before final edits were made or rushing to get through it so it would be done before her death.

All in all, this is a one time read for me, and a painful one at that. I think there is a lot that could have enhanced this story if it had her usual touches, but the lack of them makes it fall flat on its face. Thank goodness we have Petals on the River, Shanna, and A Rose in Winter to fall back on.
2 people found this helpful
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Rest in Peace Ms. Woodwiss

Kathleen E. Woodwiss was the first romance writer that I remember reading, in that I mean the Historical romance. I loved her from the start, was impatient for new books. She always took her time with her work, which meant we who loved her had to be patient. Then, a new book came out, and I could not put it down, no matter how hard I tried. And the wait began again for the next one. I was 15 when I discovered here books by then she had been writing for a few years or since 72 I believe.

I did not know she had passed on, until I looked her up and found out. No more books by her, but I say goodbye with fond memories and I hope that people will continue discovering her works. I am not sure if I read Everlasting, somehow even if I haven't I cant bring my self to read it. Something so final.

Thank you Kathleen you are missed.
2 people found this helpful