girlyswot: (couple)
girlyswot ([personal profile] girlyswot) wrote2008-12-15 08:38 am

So, which is your favourite Heyer?

Surfing my friends' friends list, I came across this, which is apparently the results of a survey of a Heyer mailing list.



Votes as of 12/14/08 (104 votes)
The Grand Sophy (1950) 4.7
Frederica (1965) 4.5
Venetia (1958) 4.5
Sylvester (The Wicked Uncle) (1957) 4.4
The Unknown Ajax (1959) 4.3
Cotillion (1953) 4.3
Arabella (1949) 4.3
The Talisman Ring (1936) 4.3
Devil's Cub (1932) 4.2
The Reluctant Widow (1946) 4.2
Black Sheep (1966) 4.1
The Quiet Gentleman (1951) 4.1
Friday's Child (1944) 4.1
The Nonesuch (1962) 4.1
False Colours (1963) 3.9
These Old Shades (1926) 3.9
Faro's Daughter (1941) 3.9
The Toll-Gate (1954) 3.9
The Corinthian (Beau Wyndham) (1940) 3.8
The Convenient Marriage (1934) 3.8
Sprig Muslin (1956) 3.8
Masqueraders (1928) 3.8
Lady of Quality (1972) 3.7
April Lady (1957) 3.6
The Foundling (1948) 3.6
Bath Tangle (1955) 3.5
Pistols for Two: And Other Stories (1960) 3.5
A Civil Contract (1961) 3.3
Death in the Stocks (Merely Murder) (1935) 3.3
Behold, Here's Poison (1936) 3.3
Regency Buck (1935) 3.2
The Unfinished Clue (1934) 3.2
An Infamous Army (1937) 3.1
Why Shoot a Butler? (1933) 3.1
Duplicate Death (1951) 3.1
Envious Casca (1941) 3.1
A Blunt Instrument (1938) 3.0
Charity Girl (1970) 3.0
Detection Unlimited (1953) 3.0
They Found Him Dead (1937) 2.9
No Wind of Blame (1939) 2.9
Footsteps in the Dark (1932) 2.9
Beauvallet (1929) 2.8
The Black Moth (1921) 2.8
Cousin Kate (1968) 2.8
The Spanish Bride (1940) 2.8
Simon the Coldheart (1925) 2.6
Penhallow (1942) 2.4
Instead of the Thorn (1923) 2.4
The Transformation of Philip Jettan (Powder and Patch) (1923) 2.3
The Conqueror (1931) 2.3
Pastel (1929) 2.1
Barren Corn (1930) 2.0
Royal Escape (1938) 1.9
My Lord John (1975) 1.9
The Great Roxhythe (1923) 1.8
Helen (1928) 1.8

I am surprised that Frederica is quite so high and disappointed that Regency Buck, A Civil Contract and An Infamous Army didn't score more. I love the historical ones too, but I'm not really surprised that they weren't so popular. I've only read a couple of the detective stories so I can't judge (and I wonder if the survey is less accurate for those, since I suspect many of the readers polled won't have read them either).

Which are your favourites and what were you surprised by?

[identity profile] frankie-ecap.livejournal.com 2008-12-15 08:55 pm (UTC)(link)
I am famously gerontophiliac. I would probably flirt with Bernard Ombersley.
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[identity profile] girlyswot.livejournal.com 2008-12-15 09:00 pm (UTC)(link)
It wasn't so much their age as their manipulative-ness I had in mind. Ombersley is quite a different sort of character and... really? Isn't he quite worthless?

Also, I think I am remembering that he was Rockhill, not Rockwell.

[identity profile] frankie-ecap.livejournal.com 2008-12-15 09:04 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm sure you're right. It took V and me about two hours to remember Lord Bromford when we did the sorting post, and even now I'm not certain we've got it right.

I would flirt with Sir Tristram were it not for the devastating certainty that he would laugh at me, and I would flirt with Sir Hugh were it not for the devastating certainty that he would fail to notice.
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[identity profile] girlyswot.livejournal.com 2008-12-15 09:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Maybe we need a poll: Which Heyer heroes would Frankie not be prepared to flirt with?

Lord Bromford is the awful one who goes on about cork oaks and ends up with Miss Wraxton.

[identity profile] frankie-ecap.livejournal.com 2008-12-15 09:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Yep. I think we sorted him Gryffindor, but neither of us are sure now. V thinks he might be a Ravenclaw gone wrong, and I am wondering if he might be a Squib.

There are of course very few people with whom I would not flirt in principle, but they have to be at least vaguely interested in me or willing to become so for the nonce. That does rule out, say, Freddy Standen, Max Ravenscar / Charles Rivenhall and others.
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[identity profile] girlyswot.livejournal.com 2008-12-15 09:20 pm (UTC)(link)
He seems a most unlikely Gryffindor. I think I would have said Slytherin because of his complete self-centeredness. Though he is not especially manipulative. I think maybe you are right that he is a Squib, actually.

I was thinking about some possible family trees for After Waterloo the other day and trying to make it work so that Sophia Challoner was Eugenia Wraxton's grandmother. There must be some scandal in the Wraxton's past to make them behave the way they do.

[identity profile] frankie-ecap.livejournal.com 2008-12-15 09:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Sophia is definitely a Squib. Miss Wraxton surely a Ravenclaw? The two are very different - I'm not immediately seeing common blood, although I like the idea of a Great Scandal in the past.

Gryffindors are noted for their courage, which to be fair to Bromford he has at some levels (repeatedly proposing to Sophy) although his fear of, um, getting a cold does perhaps leave him somewhat lacking in that department. And they are in general as subtle as a metal condom, which is a quality he shares.
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[identity profile] girlyswot.livejournal.com 2008-12-15 09:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I was imagining Sophia marrying a rather elderly Lord Brinklow for the sake of his wealth and title who conveniently dies shortly after she becomes pregnant with their first (and only) child, from whom Miss Wraxton is descended. I assume that her Ravenclaw characteristics are inherited from her mother.

Yes, I suppose that's true. He does defy his mother at one point as well, doesn't he? Unsubtlety is certainly a defining characteristics of Gryffindors, which is one reason I like them so much.

[identity profile] frankie-ecap.livejournal.com 2008-12-15 09:44 pm (UTC)(link)
You and I really don't have the same taste in men, do we?
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[identity profile] girlyswot.livejournal.com 2008-12-15 09:46 pm (UTC)(link)
No, but I think that's probably a good thing.

[identity profile] frankie-ecap.livejournal.com 2008-12-15 09:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Point.