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Pleasing Mr Pepys by Deborah Swift

100pagesaday's review

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4.0

Deb Willet's aunt has found employment for Deb as a companion to Mrs. Pepys. As the companion to the wife of Samuel Pepys, administrator to the navy of England and Member of Parliament, Deb is placed among society's finest. However, Deb quickly learns that Mrs. Pepys is insecure in her placement and Mr. Pepys has roaming hands. One of the Pepys' favored pastimes is going to the theatre. Through their theatre outings, Deb is introduced to Abigail Williams, the mistress of Lord Bruncker, President of the Royal Society. Needing a friend, Deb takes up Abigail's invitation. However, being a friend to Abigail is much more complicated than simple outing. Soon, Abigail is having Deb bring her things from Mr. Pepys office and having Deb copy letters of Lord Bruncker. Before she knows it, Deb has become a spy for the Dutch, just like Abigail.

Intricate and historically detailed, Pleasing Mr. Pepys brought me into the spy world of the 17th Century. I really didn't know much about Samuel Pepys or what was happening around London in the late 1600's except for some notorious doings of Charles II and his mistresses. I felt for Deb's character while at the same time being intrigued. I felt like she continually received the short end of the stick throughout her life; her mother left, she was thrust into the care of an aunt who saw her and her sister as a nuisance, was then sold off as a companion to Mrs. Pepys only to be taken advantage of by Mr. Pepys and cajoled into being a spy for Abigail Williams. Throughout all of this however, Deb manages to find strength and carry on. At one point she states "Very well, if she was a whore and a traitor, she would be one that survived." I found myself continually pulled into the writing by different elements, the mystery of Deb's mother, the blossoming romance between Deb and Jem and the continual danger of the spy games. Through Deb and Abagail, I was pulled into the world of a spymistress and given a different look into a woman's life in 1600's London.
I was pleased to find out that Deb Willet was a real character in the life of Samuel Pepys and written about in his diary. While Deb's true role in his life might not be fully known, Deborah Swift's creation is an exciting possibility.

This book was received for free in return for an honest review.

jmatkinson1's review

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3.0

Abandoned to live with her Aunt, Deb Willet is educated but nothing else. Her aunt arranges for her to become companion/lady's maid to Elisabeth Pepys, wife of a civil servant in London. It is not long after the restoration of the monarchy and the great fire but London is an exciting place for a girl like Deb. However as time goes on she realises that friendships have their costs and reputations are easily lost.
The premise of this novel is a clever one, hidden in the pages of Pepys' diaries are references to various women that he chased and Deb Willet is one of the em. Little remains of her story but Swift has chosen to embroider a tale around it linking social unrest and espionage to the life of a maid. There's lots to really like about this book, the setting, the knowledge of London in the late 1660s etc. However I felt it dragged in places and the credibility of the plot was definitely stretched in places.

didactylos's review

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2.0

Whilst this was an interesting concept it failed completely for me, an attempt to cover too much, an attempt to tie everything into neat piles and at the heart I didn't believe in the characters created. A shame.

thebooktrail88's review

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4.0

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I always admire authors who can mix fact and fiction and then add the magi of what could have happened... Deborah does this very well and i spent ages with this book in the world of Samuel Pepys. Very vividly drawn and wonderfully imagined, I would recommend this for some clever evocation of Pepys world and some cinematic scenes of wonder.

krismcd59's review

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4.0

Very cleverly done -- Swift has woven a plausible narrative in and around the details of Pepys' recorded interactions with his wife's companion, Deb Willet. Her depiction of life in Restoration London is full of real-life details, and offers fascinating glimpses into the choices (such as they are) for women surviving without the protection of male family. I also admired the fact that this is a rare Restoration novel that concerns itself not at all with the glamour of court figures, and instead mentions the Merry Monarch and his exploits only insofar as they interest the working people of London. An intelligent, well-researched novel, but also quite suspenseful and emotionally believable at the end.

colleenlovestoread's review

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4.0

Something I love most about historical fiction is the fact that there are just so many stories to be told, from such a variety of perspectives. As many stories as I've read centered around some point of English history, I can't think of another novel I've read that's set against the rebuilding of London after the great fire. How I've missed this I don't know, but Deborah Swift does an excellent job of setting our characters within this topsy turvy world of upheaval and growth and showing just how dangerous this world can be if you take a wrong step.

Right off the bat the novel pulls the reader in with a whip-quick murder, one that had me wondering just what other thrills the novel would have in store for me. The story soon moves to Deb Willet as we see her leaving her domineering and cruel aunt's home for a post with the Pepys's and I began to wonder...how will this sweet and intelligent girl end up embroiled in the violent action that the story opened with? I've read a number of novels that deal with historical spy rings and the dangers and benefits that can come from being pulled into this exciting yet vicious world, however I was particularly drawn to this aspect within Pleasing Mr. Pepys mainly due to the fact that Deb Willet seemed so unlike the typical person ensnared into this sort of environment. She comes from a well-to-do family, is well-educated, and seems so innocent at first, wanting simply to do well in her new circumstances and to make a better world for her and her sister. If she's able to find her mother, who abandoned her and her siblings and who, she believes, ran off to London, more's the better. Watching Abigail, so adept at intrigue and deception, pull Deb into this sinful hidden domain, against everything Deb wanted for her life, was gripping and entertaining.

Something else I very much enjoyed was seeing London from two distinct perspectives. We get to see the opulent theatres and homes of people like the Pepys, but we also get to see the dank, dirty, and dangerous back alleys of the city, where people turn to sin to feed their families and plot intrigue against a King that refuses to pay them for work done to protect his throne. It's this aspect that really excited me as the double dealing and intrigue was absolutely fascinating. Seeing people brought as low as nearly possible and then watching some of them try to right the wrongs they've committed made this a redemption story as well, and I always enjoy stories where characters scrabble back onto the right path.

Pleasing Mr. Pepys is scintillating and exciting historical fiction, all the more so since many of the character were actual people living and breathing this story. Like with all my favorite historical fiction, Swift includes historical notes at the end to flesh out fact from fiction. Having turned the last page on Deb, Abigail, the Pepys', and all the rest I now want to read more about their lives and the world they lived within. This is always a sign for me that the author did a great job of bringing their history back to life and I think historical fiction lovers will find much to enjoy in this story.
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