Showing posts with label older sister. Show all posts
Showing posts with label older sister. Show all posts

Monday, September 3, 2007

Apple from Eve, chapter 2

For some odd reason, Euphemia decides that when Tane comes to see the house, it must be spotless, and there can't be any sign that they need the money. One would think that renting out the family home would, in fact, give this impression, and that all the Sevres china and polished silver in the world wouldn't help, but Euphemia doesn't come to this conclusion. So we're treated to pages of Euphemia cleaning, polishing, and making a lovely tea for Tane.
Tane rents the house for a year, and throws a party. Euphemia is invited, and she meets thin, elegantly dressed Diana. Diana is the daughter of a baronet, and she is Tane's fiancee. She's also cold, and all too aware of her father's title. Euphemia has a rude little moment when she reminds Tane's housekeeper that, "Dr van Diederijk rents this house, Mrs Cross. I still own it" (p. 43).
The name of the book comes from an exchange between Tane and Euphemia. He sees her eating an apple, and says, "Eve and the apple" (p. 44). She asks whom she is tempting, and he assures her that she is not tempting him. That will turn out to be hogwash - but this is still a pointless title. Still, I suppose Betts couldn't name every book Marrying a Doctor.
By the way, I missed a tag in the last post: this is a older sister plot.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

plots

So. I've just finished blogging about the first Betts on my list, so now it's time for me to work out names for the various plots. All Else Confusion is certainly the basic marriage of convenience. There's the slight twist that Jake doesn't realize he's in love with Annis straight away, and Annis has at least a chance of happiness with Matt, but that's it. The marriage of convenience nearly always has at least one of them in love from the get-go, it always features a shopping spree (though there's one book, which I might be misremembering, in which the hero pretends he's poor. It sounds so unlikely for a Betts that I'll assume I'm wrong for the moment).
There's also the helpless woman plot, in which the hero finds the heroine a series of jobs - or, occasionally, she finds them herself - and despite living almost hand-to-mouth, she spends most of her surplus income on jersey dresses and two-piece outfits. That comes in handy when the hero falls in love with her, of course, but it's hardly a sound financial strategy. Of course, because she's of good family, she rarely takes a job as a maid - though that does happen. And she never goes off to get training, or live on the dole for a while until she is trained for a career. Or go to university - Betts heroines are never, ever university girls. Occasionally, the heroine has her own business - I'm reminded of a Betts heroine who owns a teashop and never makes any money, which makes her a suitable candidate for rescue by the hero.
Sometimes the helpless woman plot is combined with the marriage of convenience, or with the fabulously over-the-top ungrateful family (exemplified in the book where her selfish sister doses some babies with sleeping pills so she can go to a fashion show, if memory serves me correctly). The ungrateful family plot is where one is most likely to find a Betts heroine doing work that's "below her station", such as cleaning houses, because she works and works just so her family can buy chocolates. Extravagantly. More rarely, the Betts heroine is the older sister and caretaker of her siblings.
The inappropriate fiancee plot is a favorite as well. The heroines rarely have interesting fiancees (they tend to be dull but worthy), but the hero's fiancee is nearly always thin, attractively dressed, selfish and mean. They make for interesting reading - I'm speaking on the Betts scale of interesting, of course. Funnily enough, the Betts heroines can be just as catty as the mean fiancees when provoked, but the hero always realizes the sterling worth of the heroine and persuades the fiancee to break the engagement. Often, she finds solace in the arms of an American - rich Americans, or overly friendly ones, are the only people from the States who ever show up in the books.
The medical plot can be combined with the inappropriate fiancee plot or the ungrateful family plot (as in the example with the sleeping pills above), but basically it's your doctor-nurse cliche. They work in the same medical setting, and through a series of dramatic events they realize they're right for each other,