Simply Perfect (Simply Quartet)

by Mary Balogh

2008

Status

Available

Publication

Dell (2008), Edition: Reprint, 464 pages

Description

Fiction. Romance. Historical Fiction. HTML:BONUS: This edition contains an excerpt from Mary Balogh's The Secret Mistress. Set against the seductive backdrop of Regency England, New York Times bestselling author Mary Balogh’s latest novel sweeps us into the sensual, enthralling world of an elite academy for young ladies. Here, amid music lessons and garden parties, whispered confessions and secret yearnings, one of the school’s teachers—headmistress Claudia Martin—will find her well-ordered world jolted by love when she meets a man who would make the perfect husband…for somebody else. Tall, dark, and exquisitely sensual, he is the epitome of male perfection. Not that Claudia Martin is looking for a lover. Or a husband. As owner and headmistress of Miss Martin’s School for Girls in Bath, she long ago resigned herself to a life without love. Until Joseph, Marquess of Attingsborough, arrives unannounced and tempts her to toss away a lifetime of propriety for an affair that can only lead to ruin. Joseph has his own reasons for seeking Claudia out. Instantly, irresistibly attracted to the dedicated teacher, he embarks on a plan of seduction that leaves them both yearning for more. But as heir to a prestigious dukedom, Joseph is expected to carry on his family’s legacy. And Claudia knows she has no place in his world. Now that world is about to be rocked by scandal. An arranged marriage, a secret that will shock the ton, and a man from Claudia’s past conspire to drive the lovers apart. But Joseph is determined to make Claudia his at any cost. Even if that means defying convention and breaking every rule for a love that is everything he has ever wanted—a love that is perfection itself….… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member jjmachshev
Another emotionally satisfying book from Mary Balogh. The final of her "Simply..." series.

This is the story of Claudia Martin, school matron. Claudia doesn't like aristocrats, the ton, and men in general. She was terribly hurt as a young woman and vowed to rely only on herself while making a
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success of her life. She's in her mid-30s, firmly on the shelf, and satisfied with her life. The Joseph, Marquess of Attingsborough, arrives on an errand from one of her former teachers...and her life, and how she feels about herself are changed forever.

Joseph is finally ready and willing to take a bride from amongst the ton. He's in his mid-30s and needs to secure the succession. He wants to be happy and fulfilled in his marriage. He is also the loving father of an illegitimate blind girl, Lizzie.

The actions and decisions these two make and their reasons for doing so will capture your heart early on and not let go until long after you finish the book. This is a story of love, society, rules, and courage. I enjoyed it immensely.
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LibraryThing member muzzie
Simply Perfect by Mary Balogh
Claudia Martin, owner and headmistress of a girl’s school ruined and left with a broken heart nearly twenty years ago has given up hope of marriage and a family. Her childhood sweetheart declared that she was not good enough for him and broke their engagement when he
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inherited a Dukedom. Now at age thirty-five her past love returns and Claudia falls in love with Joseph, Marquess of Attingsborough, caught in an arranged betrothal and in line for a Dukedom. Claudia has many reasons to distrust the ton adding to her dilemma with old and new found love.

The best thing about reading a Mary Balogh romance is one not only reads about love, one feels love. {“Then I would love them too,” Claudia said, her cheeks an interesting shade of pink. “Just as dearly. Not more so, not less. Love does not have to be portioned out, Lizzie. It is the one thing that never diminishes when one gives it away. Indeed, it only grows.”}
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LibraryThing member lrobe190
Having resigned herself to life without love, Claudia Martin, headmistress of Miss Martin's School for Girls, is drawn to Joseph, the Marquess of Attingsborough, who is willing to defy convention and break every rule in society to make her his.

This is the final installment in Balogh's Simply series
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featuring teachers from Miss Martin's School for Girls. It doesn't disappoint.
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LibraryThing member bhryk0
Another enjoyable story by Mary Balogh, this is 4th of 4 books in the Simply Quartet, which features teachers at Miss Martin’s School for girls. This story is about Claudia Martin herself.

Claudia does not trust titled gentleman, especially Dukes so when the future Duke of Anburey, Joseph,
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Marquess of Attingsborough comes to her school with a note from her friend Susanna and says that he will accompany her and 2 of her students to London in 2 days time – she does not trust him.

We find out why she does not trust Dukes and it has to do with Charlie, the Duke of McLeith who she had loved and 17 then had her heart broken by him because all of sudden she was not good enough for a Duke. Her relationship with Joseph develops slowly, he introduces her to his illegitimate blind daughter Lizzie, with thoughts that Claudia might be able to take her in at her school. At the same time Joseph must find a wife so it is put to him by his father to marry a Miss Hunt – he is in a bit of turmoil as he finds himself falling in love with Claudia and at the same time trying to convince himself that he needs to find contentment with Miss Hunt, it does not quite work.

Needless to say things do not go well with Miss Hunt and he ends up with Claudia.

I now need to go back and read the earlier books in the Simply Quartet and the books in the Bedwyn Series as well – a lot of the Bedwyn’s are featured in this book too.
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LibraryThing member Renz0808
I was given this book by a friend to read because she thought I might like it, as a good quick read. It was a quick read and I did like most of it, but I was ready for it to end by the last 90 pages or so, I think I got a bit tired of the romance. I enjoyed it despite this fact and I would consider
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reading the other books in the series since I started with the last book.
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LibraryThing member Lethe20
The "Simply" series is no more than an excuse to see how the far more interesting Bedwyn family has settled down, from Balogh's original "Slightly" series.

Simply Perfect is the ending story of how Claudia Martin finds love with Joseph, Marquess Attingsborough.
LibraryThing member LadyWesley
Claudia Martin finally gets her turn -- and her comeuppance. Claudia and Joseph make a wonderful couple, and it was great fun to see all of Claudia's old colleagues as well as most of the Bedwyns again.

I totally enjoyed all of the Slightly/Simply series. Mary Balogh creates a special world and
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populates it with fascinating people who I've delighted in meeting again and again.
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LibraryThing member rmaitzen
I think this is my favorite Mary Balogh so far. I liked the prickly teacher as the heroine, and I especially liked that she pretty much stays prickly, instead of turning into an idealized sap like Lauren in A Summer to Remember. I wish Balogh's editor would help her steer clear of unnecessary
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cliches. Sometimes she ruins a perfectly good scene with a throwaway line that seems meant to add emotional depth but really made me wince. Also, I hated the "simply perfect" and "simply woman" bits. "I am woman" should never be said unless it's followed be "hear me roar."
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LibraryThing member wyvernfriend
Entertaining romance with a headmistress coming to terms with her past with the help of a Marquess, and both of them discovering what really matters to them.

Though from watching an episode of "Who do you Think you are", I know that blindness was often a symptom of congenital syphilis which kinda
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spoilt my wanting the couple to get together, they were good emotionally but I didn't want her to suffer for his dalliances, damn you educational TV.

However the couple were good, I liked them, I liked the relationship, I liked how they had to come to terms with their past and deal with some of their issues before becoming a full couple, the attraction was there from the start but they both had to acknowledge it and deal with other people and their relationship with them.

I could see the reality of the period being echoed, but I let it slide for the most part. I enjoyed it overall and liked the main characters for the most part.
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LibraryThing member Ferocity
Definitely not my favorite of the series, let alone my favorite Balogh, but I still liked it.
LibraryThing member tjsjohanna
Joseph is torn between his love for his illegitimate daughter and his love for his family. It is only when he faced with his growing attachment to Claudia in contrast to the woman his father is pushing him to marry that Joseph begins to see that there are things he is not willing to sacrifice. I
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found the ending amusing and satisfying.
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LibraryThing member spinsterrevival
I absolutely adored this, and in my mind it’s getting way more than just five stars. It was a perfect end to this quartet, and I loved Claudia and Joseph’s road to HEA. Mary Balogh writes such real characters who actually communicate with each other, and I’m so here for it. Also I guess I
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finally need to read the Bedwyn books since the whole family was everywhere through this quartet and don’t seem as unlikeable as before (except Freya of course).
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LibraryThing member mom2lnb
Simply Perfect is the fourth and final book in Mary Balogh’s Simply Quartet, which is a spin-off of her Bedwyn Saga. In it, we have the headmistress of Miss Martin’s School for Girls, Claudia Martin herself. As she’s preparing to make a trip to London with two of her graduates who are heading
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for new employment situations, a handsome gentleman shows up in her parlor. He’s none other than Joseph, the Marquess of Attingsborough, and heir to a dukedom. He’s also a sort of relation to her friend and former teacher, Susanna, who sent him to escort Claudia and her girls on their trip. Claudia thoroughly disdains members of the aristocracy, especially dukes, but feeling backed into a corner, she reluctantly accepts his offer. Along the way, she discovers that he’s quite charming, but she still doesn’t entirely trust him. Once they arrive in London, she keeps running into him at the various balls and parties that Susanna urges her to attend. The more they get to know one another, the more they find a deep attraction beginning to take root. Then Joseph introduces Claudia to his very special illegitimate daughter, asking it she might be able to educate young Lizzie at her school. The three spend a lot of time together while Claudia evaluates the possibility and she finds herself even more attracted to Joseph when she realizes what a doting father he is. However, he’s also all but betrothed to a woman who is widely considered the perfect match for a duke in waiting, while she’s naught but a mere schoolteacher. As hard as Claudia tries to be pragmatic about the situation, she still can’t help following her heart, but she fears it will all end in yet another heartbreak for her.

Claudia is the last unmarried member of the group of four friends who worked side-by-side to educate the girls at Miss Martin’s School. She, of course, is the one who started it all years ago. As the daughter of a country gentleman, she didn’t have a lot of options open to her besides marriage, so following a youthful heartbreak that left her soured on love, she took up the profession of teaching and became governess to a young Freya Bedwyn, who was apparently a brat back then. Between Freya and her oldest brother and guardian Wolfric, the Bedwyn clan got on Claudia’s last nerve, sending her marching off down the driveway with her dignity barely intact. From there, she started her school where she’s become the beloved headmistress to both students and teachers alike. When Joseph shows up offering his carriage and an escort, she really wants to say no. After two bad experiences with dukes, she’s not impressed with the aristocracy, but knowing it would be rude to refuse, she acquiesces. As they get to know one another during the trip and at the various functions they attend later, Claudia soon discovers that Joseph is everything she could hope for in a man, but he’s also someone with many obligations – to his daughter, to his family, to his title, and to the woman he’s all but betrothed to. However, in spite of all that, as well as the very real probability that she’ll walk away with another broken heart, she can’t help being drawn to him and savoring their stolen moments together.

At thirty-five, Claudia is a firmly on the shelf spinster who definitely has the crisp, matronly veneer of a schoolteacher. She didn’t get where she is without a backbone of steel, but underneath her prim, proper exterior beats a kind, passionate heart. She begins the story pretty prickly toward Joseph and thinking some rather uncharitable things about him, although I have to give her credit for being self-aware enough to realize that she’s being unfair to him. Gradually, though, she comes to see him in a different light, and from there, things begin warming up between them. I like that she’s a very loving and giving person, first toward her girls and fellow teachers, then toward Joseph and Lizzie. She’s willing to risk heartbreak for the perfect memory of being with him even if it’s only for a short time. I was perhaps ever so slightly frustrated with her when the way seemed to finally clear for an HEA, but she was still making excuses for why it wouldn’t work, although I did understand that she had obligations of her own and that it was going to be a huge adjustment for her. I loved what she decided to do at the end, though, and how she didn’t give up her independent streak or her love of teaching.

As a duke in waiting, Joseph is a somewhat typical aristocrat in that he understands his obligations to the title, and due to his father’s questionable health, he’s being pressured to find a wife soon. His father and the father of a young aristocratic woman have basically already made the deal and him actually offering for her hand is now little more than a formality. She happens to be none other than Portia, who was attached to Lucius back in the first book of the series, Simply Unforgettable, and now has her sights set on Joseph. The only problem is that while she’s perfect for him on paper, she lacks any kind of passion or even kindness in her heart, so he fears that theirs will likely be a loveless marriage. This might not be a problem for many members of the ton who would simply take a mistress to satisfy those needs, but Joseph is a man who believes in monogamous relationships even if that relationship is only with a mistress, much less with a wife, which is one thing about him that utterly endeared me. The other is that’s he’s a doting father to his illegitimate daughter, Lizzie, who lost her mother – his longtime mistress – the year before. He’s been a loving, involved parent in her life since the day she was born and wants the best for her in everything, which is why he asks Claudia if she’d be willing to admit Lizzie to her school despite the little girl’s disability. He’d already been attracted to Claudia anyway, but seeing her interact with his beloved daughter only deepens his feelings for her. Joseph would also like nothing more than to shout it from the rooftops that Lizzie is his, so he’s frustrated by the fact that titled gentlemen simply can’t acknowledge their by-blows and that she’ll always come second to his legitimate family. I really like how all this worked out and admired Joseph, not only for being a responsible father, but also for not being ashamed of his child in spite of the circumstances of her birth and her not being perfect. A part of me wanted him to just kick Portia to the curb for her snotty behavior, but I also understood that having things play out the way they did was more historically accurate. In any case, I did fall for Joseph and thought he was a wonderful hero.

Simply Perfect boasts a huge cast of supporting characters, so many, in fact, that I had a hard time keeping them all straight and more or less had to give up. I admit that it might have been easier if I’d read the Bedwyn Saga first, because most of these characters were introduced in those books. Joseph’s cousin, Neville, the only one who knows about Lizzie, and his wife, Lily, who had their story told in the Bedwyn prequel, One Night for Love, support Joseph. Then there’s Kit and Lauren from A Summer to Remember. Many of the Bedwyns are present as well, along with their families, including Wulfric and Christine (Slightly Dangerous), Freya and Joshua (Slightly Scandalous), and Morgan and Gervase (Slightly Tempted). Claudia finally gets a chance to bury the hatchet with Wulfric and Freya. Neville’s sister, Gwen, whose story is told in The Proposal, Book #1 of the Survivor’s Club series, puts in several appearances. There is also a huge anniversary party for the Earl and Countess of Redfield who I feel certain were introduced somewhere in these books as well. And of course, all of Claudia’s friends including Lucius and Frances (Simply Unforgettable), Sydnam and Anne (Simply Love), and Peter and Susanna (Simply Magic) reunite to support Claudia. If only I’d read the Bedwyn books, I probably could have said that this was the perfect wrap-up to both series because of all the familiar faces. As is, though, I’m feeling inspired to at some point do just that and then re-read the Simply Quartet just to get the full impact.

Overall, Simply Perfect was a near-perfect story that was a pleasure to read. It was sweet and emotional, giving me all the feels I expect from a romance. Joseph and Claudia are clearly made for one another and the thought that they were very nearly kept apart simply because of their differing social backgrounds was nearly infuriating, but at the same time kept me reading to see just how they were finally going to get their HEA. Claudia’s mysterious benefactor is also revealed and it was exactly who I’d been suspecting. Other than the few minor things I’ve already mentioned the only reason I dropped a half star is because this is a very slow burning story. It took until probably halfway into it before Joseph and Claudia share their first kiss and quite a bit farther before they make love for the first time. Even then, it seems like they’re destined to be heartbroken for the rest of their lives until fate intervenes and helps push things along. Because of how long it takes for things to happen, the pacing occasionally felt a bit too slow. But otherwise, this was a lovely story that I very much enjoyed. Now I look forward to going backwards to learn all about the other interesting characters I was introduced to in this series and to read about all of their HEA endings, too.
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LibraryThing member phyllis2779
Really liked this installment in the Simply series. I think I read the others quite a while ago but I remembered some of the characters when they appeared in this book. I liked that the main characters were more mature and that the barriers separating seemed more real in the Regency period.
LibraryThing member JorgeousJotts
This was a disappointment to me and by far my least favorite of the series. It felt like a lot of the nuance and dimension of the other books had just been left out of this one. I don't know if Balogh was rushed, or distracted or what, but this is definitely weaker than the others. There really
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isn't much more to the female lead than we had seen of her as a peripheral character in the other books. Almost less even, in the other books you could at least tell she cared for her fellow school teachers and was a rock for them, but they hardly interact in any meaningful way in this book. And without those relationships you're just left with a stereotypical school miss who likes projecting herself as severe, and extremely dislikes the Bedwyns, the aristocracy as a whole, and Dukes in particular. I was hoping she would at least produce some solid reasons for her cartoonish dislike of them that we hadn't already heard, but really there's only one thing and it isn't that strong of a reason to still be holding such a grudge 15 years later! She ended up just irking me. The male lead was less tiresome, but besides one additional life circumstance we learn about him, there didn't seem to be much more to his character either. And the 'other woman' who had been mostly just a snob in the other books became almost villainous here. Who really hates on a little disabled girl? Or, at least, who can't read a room well enough to realize that others aren't joining you in that criticism and if you keep it up you'll seem like a monster? And there's just no way that a lady of the time, much less one known for being the "perfect" lady, would repeatedly voice such strong opposing views to her betrothed. Only the one issue would be worth risking ruffling his feathers. Otherwise, ladies make themselves agreeable. It's like the most important lesson they're taught! Even if she later planed to do whatever she wanted to begin with, at least to his face she would be congenial. The characters seemed to mostly be in their own way. Repeatedly... But mostly the lack of dimension is what really weakened the story for me.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

2008-04-01

Physical description

464 p.; 4.17 inches

ISBN

9780440241997

Barcode

1602244
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