Sweet Savage Eden (The North American Woman Trilogy)
Sweet Savage Eden (The North American Woman Trilogy) book cover

Sweet Savage Eden (The North American Woman Trilogy)

Mass Market Paperback – February 1, 1989

Price
$8.99
Publisher
Dell
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0440202356
Dimensions
4.13 x 0.83 x 6.77 inches
Weight
6.9 ounces

Description

New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Heather Graham majored in theater arts at the University of South Florida. Her first book was published by Dell, and since then she has written more than one hundred novels and novellas. Married since high school graduation and the mother of five, Graham asserts that her greatest love in life remains her family, but she also believes that her career has been an incredible gift. Romance Writers of America presented Heather Graham with the RWA Lifetime Achievement Award in 2003. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The Crossroads Inn England Winter, the Year of Our Lord 1621 The Reign of His Royal Majesty, King James I xa0 While the cold wind whistled and raged, threatening to tear asunder the rafters of the tiny attic bedchamber, Jassy clenched her hands into fists at her sides. She didn’t feel the cold as she stared down at the frail beauty on the bed cocooned in threadbare blankets. The woman drew in a rattling breath, and suddenly Jassy became aware of her surroundings, the unpainted rafters that barely held the walls together, the smut from the candles, the ancient trunk at the foot of the bed holding their few belongings, the cold that ever seeped in upon them. Jassy swallowed and her jaw locked tightly as tears pricked her eyes. xa0 She’ll not die like this! she swore to herself. I’ll not let her! I shall beg, borrow, or steal, but so help me God, I shall not let her die like this! xa0 But even as Jassy silently made her vows, old Tamsyn was staring at her sadly, shaking his head just slightly, in a way not meant to be seen, and certainly not understood. But Jassy understood the motion all too well; Tamsyn had already given up all hope on Linnet Dupré. xa0 “Quinine, girl. Quinine might help to ease her misery some, but that be all I can tell you.” xa0 Tears welled anew in her eyes; she could not allow them to fall. Impatiently she brushed her small, work-roughened hands across her temple, raising her chin. xa0 Tamsyn was wrong, she assured herself. He had to be wrong. What was Tamsyn but another beaten-down drunk to have found his livelihood with the rest of them at the Crossroads Inn? He claimed to have once been a physician who had even studied long ago at Oxford, but perhaps that was a lie. A lie like the dreams he had spun for her of a new day to come, of distant lands and faraway places, exotic voyages and emerald seas. xa0 Her mother was dying. She had no time for dreams, and she dared not fall prey to despair. xa0 “Quinine,” Jassy said briskly. xa0 “Quinine,” Tamsyn repeated. “But ye may as well wish for the moon, Jassy, lass. The cost of a dosexa0…” xa0 His words trailed away, and Jassy gnawed bitterly into her lower lip. The cost for anything was dear when her mother’s wages at the inn came to no more than one gold coin and a bolt of cloth a year. xa0 And when she was paid nothing herself, as well. Nothing, since she apprenticed to the cook and her endeavors would not be considered worthy of coin until she had completed five years of service. xa0 She lowered her head suddenly, whispering in desperation, “I can beg Master John—” xa0 “Save your breath, girl,” Tamsyn warned her. “Master John will give you naught.” xa0 And she knew that he was right. The customers ate great platters of meat with rich gravy, they drank tankards of ale and imported French wines. Master John was quick to buy a round of drinks, generous to all his customers. xa0 To his servants he was mean and cheap. xa0 And, Jassy thought was a little sigh, they had stayed, anyway, knowing that he was stingy and even cruel at times. They had stayed, for Linnet had always been fragile, not cut out to work, and only here, where they could share this little attic hovel and Jassy could do the majority of her mother’s work could they hope to survive. xa0 A slight whimpering sound came from the bed. Jassy rushed to her mother’s side, kneeling down beside her, grasping her frail hand in her own. Her tears almost spilled then. Linnet did not appear real at all, but as some fairy queen. Even now she was fine and beautiful—now, when death lay a claim upon her. Nay, not death! Jassy swore. She would be hanged before she would see her mother die here, beautiful, beautiful Linnet, never intended for such a life in such a horrid, squalid place. xa0 Linnet’s eyes opened, glazed with fever, all the more beautiful for that glaze. They were truly violet eyes, not blue, not gray, but deep, beautiful violet. A violet as lovely as the gold of her hair and the parchment-pale, but perfect, oval of her face. xa0 A face not old in years but made to appear so by years of care and struggle. xa0 “Mama!” Jassy gripped her hand warmly. “I am here!” xa0 Then panic struck her, for Linnet did not recognize her. She spoke to the past, to people no longer present. “Is that you, Malden? Tell Sheffield that the curtain must be held, for I am feeling poorly, and that twit of a girl is no understudy to take on the role of Lady Macbeth!” xa0 Again tears burned beneath Jassy’s lids, and dark despair seized hold of her. Linnet, she saw, was losing her slender grip upon reality, upon life. She reverted quickly to days gone by. To a tender past, a far grander place than the present. For Linnet Dupré had not always been cast into such a lowly state in life—nay, she had most oft been cast as a princess or an heiress. She had reigned as a queen, a queen in the London theatrical community. She had traveled to Paris and Rome; she had been welcomed and applauded throughout the Christian world. xa0 In those days she had been courted by dukes and earls, by nobility and grandeur. xa0 Somewhere among that grandeur she had produced Jassy. xa0 And for many, many years Jassy had lived in grandeur too. Her mother had housed a multitude of servants—and treated them kindly! There had been Remington to answer the bell and look after the house; old Mary to cook; Sally Frampton from nearby Waverly to bathe her mother in rich lotions and dress her hair in the latest styles. There had been Brother Anthony to teach Jassy French and Latin, Miss Nellie to teach her to dance, and Herr Hofinger to teach her all about the world at large, the oceans and the rivers, the Romans and the Gauls. He, too, had filled her head with fantasy; stories about the explorer, Columbus; about the New World, the Colonies, the Americas and the Indians. He had told her tales about the Spaniards and the great defeat of the Armada, and how the English still met and tangled with the Spaniards on the sea, claiming pieces of the New World. And he had told her stories about the great houses and mansions and castles within England, and in her dreams she had been swept off her feet by a golden knight and taken to a glorious castle to reign evermore as its mistress. In those dreams Linnet would never be exhausted or overburdened. She would sit at ease and elegantly pour tea from a silver server, and she would be dressed in silk and velvet and fur. xa0 That had all been a dream, in a far distant and different life. xa0 There had come that long dry spell when Linnet had not been able to obtain a role in the theater. And Linnet had never bothered with her own finances, so she was in complete shock and distress to learn that not only did she not have the money to take a smaller house, but also was so far in debt that the gaping jaws of Newgate Prison awaited her eagerly as her fate. xa0 Some godsend fell upon them then; miraculously a mysterious “donor” kept them discreetly from distress. xa0 Linnet knew what had occurred; she would not tell Jassy, as Jassy was but a nine-year-old child. xa0 But by the age of ten, Jassy understood servants’ gossip. They all whispered about the Duke of Somerfield having “done something fair” for her mother at long last. xa0 And then they stared at her, and through little George, the cook’s son, she learned that she was “illy-gitmit” and that everyone thought that the duke, who had had “illy-cit” relations with her mother, should have surely pulled them out of trouble long before. xa0 Such rumors were lovely dreams to Jassy at first; she imagined that her father would be a great, handsome man in his prime; that one day she should appear in his great hall and that he would instantly think her beautiful and accomplished and love and adore her above all his legitimate offspring. Then he, of course, could introduce her to the handsome golden knight who would sweep her away to her own castle. xa0 It wasn’t to be. At the little kitchen breakfast table they could then afford, Linnet jumped up one morning, screamed, and fell to the floor in a dead faint. xa0 Jassy rushed to help her, as did Mary. Mary muttered, wondering what could have caused such a thing. But Jassy then picked up the paper, being able to read as Mary could not, and quickly perused the page, learning then that the duke had been killed most ingloriously in an outlawed duel. xa0 There was no one to pay the rent on the small house. One by one the servants went. Then the house went, and then the very last of their precious hoard of gold coins and pounds sterling. Linnet could not find work in the London theater again—the duke’s vicious duchess was busy seeing that no establishment would have her. xa0 Jassy quickly realized that they must find work. In time Linnet knew, too, that menial work would be their hope of survival, Newgate awaiting any man or woman who did not meet their obligations. xa0 She also discovered that she was singularly talentless when it came to working for a living, and in the end she was forced to become the scullery maid at the inn, work totally unsuited to her lovely, fragile form. xa0 Master John hired them on only because Jassy was twelve by then, in the peak of health, easily able to work the full fourteen-hour day that her mother could not. xa0 Jassy was jerked back to the present as Linnet moved fretfully on the bed, speaking again.

Features & Highlights

  • From a marriage of convenience, a fierce, all-consuming love was born.
  • From the first time Jasmine’s eyes met those of Lord Jamie Cameron in a smoky British inn, theirs was the wrong kind of attraction—not gentle, slow, and easy, but hot, hard, and all-consuming.The illegitimate daughter of an actress and duke, Jassy had dreams no man could wrench from her in a moment of desire. She’d resist this bold nobleman with all the strength of her soul. But her golden hair, fiery temperament, and indomitable spirit obsessed Lord Cameron . . . and he wanted her with him when he sailed for the new wilderness called Virginia. So he had a bargain for the spit-fire Jassy, one that only a very special woman would dare to make.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(185)
★★★★
25%
(77)
★★★
15%
(46)
★★
7%
(22)
-7%
(-21)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A nostalgic disappointment.

I read this for the first time as a teenager--pilfered it from the paperbacks section of the library, actually. As a hormone-ruled young man confused about his sexuality and fascinated by the dangerous sensuality of Jamie Cameron, I really enjoyed the book as a teen. Now, over a decade later, I picked up a new copy of the book and found myself shaking my head in annoyance over the same character I'd found so fascinating. Overall the story lacks in many areas, but it's the relationship between Jassy and Jamie that baffles me. Their conversations are unrealistic (and that's after the typical suspension of disbelief one wields when diving into historical romance) and utterly lacking in any flow or chemistry, and Jamie is pointlessly cruel and stubborn in ways that do nothing to flesh out his character. You don't expect romance-novel males to be realistic; that's part of the fun. They're a fantasy. I just can't imagine Jamie Cameron as anyone's ideal fantasy, when he offers very little to make him sympathetic--and very little to make him believably strong and powerful other than his own wanking on about how he takes what he wants and does what he wants. Any compassion or kindness that he shows in an effort to make him sympathetic to the reader just comes off as a sneering, smirking game to toy with Jassy even more. He displays little to no remorse when it's demonstrated that his treatment of her, in many cases, is wholly unjustified. The part near the end, after the (SPOILER) birth of their son, when things seem to be getting better until he abruptly decides to distance himself and dismiss Jassy back to England really just comes out of nowhere and seems to make little sense and have little motivation other than the author's desire to create one more rift between them that's solved by the final conflict.

I'm not a big fan of the flat, one-dimensional portrayal of characters such as Hope or Powan, either--and I'm not saying that just because I'm part Native. I'm looking at them from a professional writer's perspective, not an offended Native American's (the research put into that aspect was actually quite good, and I have to agree with the tribe member's review there). It's the characters themselves and not the depiction of their culture that lacks.

The sex is steamy, even if full of the vague euphemisms one expects. (Isn't that part of the fun of romance novels? Removing the messier, more awkward aspects of sex to focus on the better parts?) Oddly, as a boy I didn't like Jassy much. Now that I'm older I find myself enjoying her more, down to the point of feeling terrible for her after the way Jamie treated her despite the fact that she's a bit of a stubborn, stuck-up brat. I also loved Elizabeth and would have loved to see more of her character. Jassy's half-brother, on the other hand, seemed to suffer from the same melange of unnecessary cruelty and jerkishness as Jamie, while people constantly excused him for it. Yes, sometimes characters will be jerks, just as sometimes real people are jerks. But these two lacked reason and depth, and the story was presented as if their actions were supposed to make sense when, in truth, they didn't.

I'm rating this 3/5 for three reasons:

1. This book introduced me to Heather Graham, who's become one of my favorite romance novelists;
2. despite my complaining, parts of it were enjoyable (and I don't just mean the passionately depicted sex); and
3. sheer nostalgia, as despite finding more to criticize with age, this book brought back many fond memories of my youth.
20 people found this helpful
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Superb North American Woman Romance (1st in Series)

This is the first in the North American Women trilogy which is a part of the Cameron Saga series (see list below). I highly recommend these romances. They were the ones that led me to become a huge fan of Heather Graham's work. This is the first book in the series and I loved it.

This is Jasmine's ("Jassy") and Jamie's story, which begins in 17th century England and leads to the New World (Virginia). Jassy has had a hard life as the bastard daughter of a dead nobleman whose mother dies for lack of medical attention. She learns of her connections to a noble family and they take her in as little better than a servant. There she meets the dark Lord Cameron who wants to marry her because she reminds him of his "wild Virginia" he has come to love and where he is building a life. Jassy thinks she is in love with his friend the charming and fair Robert, but Robert has other plans. Jassy doesn't want to die in starvation and poverty like her mother, so she consents to wed Jamie.

Jamie Cameron wants the beautiful Jassy...she makes his blood boil. He thinks she will be strong enough to endure the life in the wilderness where there are still Indians and pressures just to survive. But Jamie does not tell Jassy that he is taking her to the New World; and Jassy longs for the security of Jamie's beautiful manor in England. She does not love Jamie; she is not even sure she likes him. But she is honest and tells him she is marrying him so she will not starve. Can she love a man she hates? Can she forget the fair Robert? Can Jamie love the tavern wench who wants only his wealth? So begins an adventure that is so well told and so well done, I will read it again and again.

Heather Graham's writing is just superb. Her portrait of early America is wonderful. The story pulls you in and does not let you go. There are no slow spots as the action and characters become so real. The sexual tension permeates the book and is very believable. You love Jassy and Jamie and you will find yourself drawn back to those historical times at the beginning of America. This is a keeper!

Here's the Cameron Saga:

The North American Women trilogy: Sweet Savage Eden, A Pirate's Pleasure and Love Not a Rebel
The Camerons in Civil War trilogy: One Wore Blue, And One Wore Gray, And One Rode West
13 people found this helpful
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MAJOR PUBLISHER ERRORS!!

So I'm enjoying reading this book... Got up to page 310 and found EXTREME printer errors (see the 3 pictures). It goes in this order: page 310, page 313, blank page, page 312 which has type cut off the whole page, 311 which also has type cut off the whole page, & page 315. Page 314 is missing...

I worked in printing for many years and this kind of mistake will probably be in HUNDREDS of these reprinted books. So you may want to try to find an older copy of this book. I have NEVER seen a printing mistake this bad in a published book.
4 people found this helpful
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This is books has absolutely no SUSPENSE

I'll admit, I was intrigued the for the first 20 or 30 pages of the book when you first meet this supposedly drop dead gorgeous poor young orphan. However, after the 2 handsome strangers jerk her away to meet her "rich" estranged family all the suspense dies there. There is absolutely NO PLOT in this book and the romantic dialogue in the book certainly does NOT make you blush! So if the books is free, try it, but if its not, don't waste your hard earned money!
4 people found this helpful
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This book is why is started reading Heather Graham!!!

This is one of the first books that I ever read as a young adult and it is one of the reasons why I got hooked onto reading. Heather Graham's writing is great. This book started out as just two people needing one another but for very different reasons. Jassy needed money, food and a place to settle into, while Jamie needed a women who could brave the untamed colonies. What they found in each other was so much more. They love in the most unexpected place (the new world) and that they were each other's soul mate. Though it took a long time to do so, the wait was priceless. This was a great book, which spoke of true and life changing love.

Heather Graham is a keeper.
4 people found this helpful
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Historical romance circa 1989

So this is how they did it in 1989. Lots of forced sex, then lots of angry sex, finally a little bit of tender sex, then more angry sex (that seems to be the only way Jamie knows, and Jassy seems to pick fights with him so they'll keep having a sex life). I kept reading because I hoped Jassy and Jamie would eventually admit they loved each other, but even when the book ended I couldn't be sure he wouldn't keep asking her if she was thinking about Robert and she wouldn't keep telling him she wanted her freedom. Well, if you like lots of sex in your books and forced sex doesn't repel you, this book might be for you.
2 people found this helpful
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This book made me cry!

One of the best of Heather Graham for sure! Could not put this one down - in spite of, at times, wanting to personally castrate the main character, Jamie. He's hard-nosed, obnoxious, and downright mean to Jassie, but Graham brings it together so well at the end and has enough depth of characterization that in spite of the hero's decidely unheroic behavior at times, we do begrudgingly understand him. My hatred of him, at times, made me obsessively keep turning pages! Could not put it down. Not for you if you don't like borderline rape scenes, obsession and controlling male characters. That said, I found Jamie to be just the type of man who came to conquer the New World, and had the type of personality it would have required. My hat's off to Graham for this one!
2 people found this helpful
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A Terrific Read

I don't get why people think Jassy was a brat or that Jamie was a total SOB. Jassy was terrified of the New World as well as what she perceived as Jamie's indifference towards her. Jamie worried that he'd been played a fool by a cunning vixen and certainly said a few things to hurt Jassy in moments of anger and insecurity. They were harsh but true for the times and realistic as to what one might say. She said stupid things, too. That made them human, not some perfect, unrealistic hero/heroine. I like a touch of imperfection, please. It adds to the believability and often to the passion of the story. Because let's face it, anger and sexual attraction are just two shades of passion and this book has that! Both the main characters are flawed and so much alike in their pride, their stubbornness, and insecurities about what the other wants from them. It's what propels the story forward many times when they come so close to getting it right. This was a terrific read and Heather Graham is a wonderful romantic author. One of the few I truly enjoy reading. I can't stand ridiculous flowery fluff about a helpless damsel in distress and a perfect hero that comes to her rescue with so much overdone sap that the pages stick together. You won't get the ridiculous with Graham's books. A wonderful author and read! Plus she's known for her historical accuracy in her books. She does her research.
1 people found this helpful
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Romantic adventure

Loved this book. There was plenty of drama and adventure!
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A Story that Starts Well ... And Fizzles:

This book is the opening of the series CAMERON'S SAGA: NORTH AMERICAN WOMAN TRILOGY. And this series is the prequel to CAMERON'S SAGA: CIVIL WAR TRILOGY (also 3 books). Since I enjoyed the Civil War trilogy, I decided to back up and read this set.

The story opens in England, as Jassy Dupre is taking care of her dying mother. Mother and daughter have fallen on hard times; Jassy is the illegitimate of a stage actress and a duke. For the first several years, the duke kept the 2 Dupres in wealth and splendor. When he died, the duchess, out of spite, had the actress blackballed from work in the theater. Now, they live in an attic and work 14+ hours each day as kitchen maids.

Two men see Jasmine walking behind the coffin the next morning, and recognize her as the wench who served them ale the night before. Soon, the lives of these 3 people are permanently linked. Jasmine marries Jamie while she is enamored with Robert. Although attracted to Jassy/Jasmine, Robert marries her half-sister Lenore.

Both couples travel to Virginia, where Lord Jamie Cameron holds a huge plat of land, bestowed on him by the King for services rendered in the past. Jamie, as third son, is expected to make his own way in the world ... and he has.

This story weaves and bends with interesting scenes that holds the reader's attention. However, I had a problem with 3 things. (1) The violence against women was excessive; I've never heard of someone of Henry's stature beating a woman - especially in such a way.

Jamie, who had sufficient reason to be enraged with Jassy, was also excessive. I had a great deal of compassion for his situation but he was hard and implacable - hardly what one would expect of a new groom.

(2) The decision Jamie made about his wife and child did not make sense, especially in relation to his avowal that `what is mine, I keep.'

(3) The constant misunderstandings and tempers got to be boring after a while. It was actually so tedious that I considered not finishing the book. Hopefully, the next book is an improvement. 2.5 stars

Cameron's Saga: North American Woman Trilogy
1. Sweet Savage Eden (1989)
2. A Pirate's Pleasure (1989)
3. Love Not a Rebel (1989)

Cameron's Saga: Civil War Trilogy
1. One Wore Blue (1991)
2. And One Wore Gray (1992)
3. And One Rode West (1992)