Historical fiction featured book | Lady of the Butterflies by Fiona Mountain

- My rating: Very good/excellent (based on entertainment value not historical accuracy which I don’t read for)
- New-to-me author: Yes
- Would I read more from this author: Yes
Title: Lady of the Butterflies
Author/website: Fiona Mountain
Publisher: Putnam, a division of the Penguin Group
Publication date & page count: July ’10 & 527 pages
From page 197 of Lady of the Butterflies
“I love my husband,” I said firmly. “I love Edmund.”
“I love Edmund too,” he echoed savagely. “I’ve known him all my life. His father and my father knew each other all their lives. Do not think I am not tortured by guilt for this, for how I feel about you. But I cannot help myself. I cannot help it that for these past months I have tossed and turned in my bed every night for longing for Edmund’s little wife. Nell, I have never wanted a woman as I want you.”
Set in Somerset and London during the turbulent time of the Restoration, Lady of the Butterflies is a dramatic tale of passion, prejudice and death by poison, of riot and rebellion, science and superstition, madness and metamorphosis. It is also about the beauty of butterflies, about hope, transformation and redemption.
Eleanor is the daughter of a strict puritan and Roundhead major and lives in a medieval manor on the bleak wetlands of Somerset. Her longing for colour and brightness leads to an obsession with butterflies as well as to an illicit passion for charismatic but troubled Richard Glanville. Richard, the son of an exiled Cavalier, embodies all that Eleanor had been taught to despise and distrust, but he also holds for her all the allure of the forbidden. Her first husband dies, seemingly poisoned, freeing Eleanor and Richard to marry. But can their love survive suspicion and prejudice, a bloody rebellion which makes them bitter enemies, and a superstitious community that stirs up hatred towards her for her love of butterflies? It seems the only peace she can find is in her long-lasting friendship with renowned naturalist James Petiver, a clever young London apothecary who is credited as the father of British entomology. But when Eleanor and Richard’s son becomes apprenticed to James, tragedy strikes, and Eleanor is forced to embark on a dangerous search for her son that is entwined with a personal quest for truth, freedom and love.
Lovely cover, interesting title and what sounds like a very exciting story. Certainly leaves me intrigued.
I have not heard of this one…what?! It sounds really good. Thanks for sharing! And on to the TBR list it goes.
You’re not the first person to rave about this book…I can’t wait to get my hands on a copy. Plus I love butterflies
Very interesting!
Sounds like it was worthwhile just for the plot. I wonder if it is on the same line of what I’ve just finished The King’s Mistress. I really enjoyed the historical lure and will put Lady of the Butterflies down in TBR list.
This one sounds wonderful. I don’t read historical fiction for the accuracy either!! Love that cover!
I have got to get this book. Everyone seems to love it and it sounds awesome.
I loved Lady of the Butterflies. I reviewed it here. http://bookwormsdinner.blogspot.com/2010/07/review-youve-been-waiting-for-lady-of.html
I loved this one too!!!