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Hardcover An Inconvenient Wife Book

ISBN: 0446529567

ISBN13: 9780446529563

An Inconvenient Wife

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Mrs. Lucy Carleton is daughter of one of the oldest and wealthiest families in New York City. William is Lucy's un-pedigreed nouveau riche husband. Problems arise when Lucy becomes increasingly uncomfortable with the prudish manners and paternalistic dependencies that define the wives of New York society. Lucy longs to break away and give free rein to her more bohemian soul, but her ambitious husband and domineering father are determined that she...

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Oh Lucy girl

I absolutely loved this book. The protagonist, Lucy, is captivating. A page-turner for sure.

The unveiling-or is it the creation?-of a woman's true soul

When I first started getting serious about historical fiction I came across this book many times. It even was on my whish list for a while but in the end I decided to focus on areas that were more interesting to me like the middle ages and early age of enlightenment. In the past few days I had the opportunity to read "An Inconvenient Wife" and I was completely stunned by how good this book was. This book is written like a mystery almost, but without the mystery. It's about long ago medical practices know thought of ridiculous and insane but it manages not to make fun of them and to stay very much in the period. And it has the most stunning characterization of any book I've read in a long time. Lucy is a very inconvenient wife. Over the four years of her marriage to her very upper class Knickerbockers father's stockbroker she has had fits, headaches, weakness, is addicted to laudanum and has been unable to conceive, all of which is trying the patience of her loving husband William. Finally at the end of his rope William takes Lucy to the newest doctor in New York, a new breed of physician called a neurologist, a man named Victor Seth. Told through Lucy's first person prospective and Victor's clinical notes, the story unfolds into a complicated tale of thwarted desire and passion. Lucy's medical problems deemed to be from a lack of passion and as Victor works with hypnosis they improve but he is soon of possession of Lucy's deepest secrets while William, facing the new and improved Lucy is daunted and displeased. Everyone in this book is a complicated and complete person and that is what the book so good. Lucy-what is wrong with her? I couldn't make heads or tails of her medical problems and growing personality. Is she truly improved-or is at all just the power of suggestion? And does the same apply to her new personality? Victor is equally troubling because of his control over Lucy through hypnosis. Is he really just seeing her as an experiment or is he truly beginning to care for her? Is he horrifying or just brilliant? And William-well in a way William has the biggest secret of all. This is a stunning book that is highly atmospheric of high society in old New York and what women had to go through to be seen as socially acceptable. The whole "hysteria" diagnosis is horrifying and a reminder of how little we used to know about the human brain. And the book has a twisty, swervy often dark plot with things you will never expect. In the end though, it is about the creation or unveiling of a true soul and watching Lucy change, from the very first line of the book to the very last, is a fascinating journey you will not soon forget. Five stars.

1800's New York...

This was a really good book set in NYC in 1885. A time when women were allowed no freedoms, and her place was to see to the house, the servants, and her husband. This is Lucy Carlton's story. A woman who was born into wealth and privilege, bred to be the epitome of high-class and high society. Lucy marries William Carlton, a stock-broker who is not of her class, but makes enough money for the upper-class folks that they seemingly except him. Lucy struggles with fits of hysteria, and frequent headaches, and is absent or leaves early from many social gatherings. William has taken her to doctor after doctor, and nothing seems to be working...untill she starts seeing Dr. Victor Seth. Dr. Seth is a doctor of neurology, something the folks of 1885 have never heard of before. No one knows what to think of his treatments of hypnotism, but the therapy is working wonders for Lucy...for the most part. Dr. Seth proves to be the best and worst thing to happen to Lucy. While the hysteria fits have ended, new problems start plaguing her. She finds herself doing and feeling things that are totally foreign to her, and make William feel threatened. In the end, Lucy and William's life together will never be the same, and lies and scandal hit the high society of NYC. Overall a great read...the ending was excellent, something I never would of expected, and the descriptions of the time period were wonderful. The clothes, the houses, the way of life for the most important citizens of NYC, and the limitations on women of the day. I definitely won't think twice about picking up another book from this author!

She outsmarted them all.!!!!

I couldn't put this book once I had started it. I found the subject matter & time & place great. Poor Lucy. I almost found myself in hysterics while reading about the way her husband & father treated & manipulated her. This is a great read. Don't miss this one. I will now seek out other books by this author.

Great story

Lucy always wanted to be free to be her own woman but as she was being raised by her father, he buried her spirit by making Lucy give up anything that was important to her... religion, poetry, and painting. Once she was married, her husband did the same thing because he wanted a proper woman who acted the way a woman of the upper class should act. With no way to live out her dreams, Lucy suffered from hysteria and was not able to conceive a child. William sent her to many doctors to help her but nobody could until Victor Seth came into the picture. He was a neurologist that used hypnosis to help women with nerve problems. His treatment was unkown and criticized, but they were willing to try as a last resort before sending Lucy to the asylum. Victor made great strides with the treatment of Lucy and in the process they became involved with each other. Lucy was cured, but then she became an "inconvenience" to William because he could no longer control her. When William found out what was going on between Lucy and Victor he sent her away against her wishes which brought on a chain of events that has serious repercussions. I found Megan Chance when she published Susannah Morrow and I really enjoyed it so I figured I would try An Inconvenient Wife too. Megan is a very talented author that has the rare ability to bring you into a story and keep you there right to the end.

Fascinating Psychological -Historical Tale

This book is what I imagine would have happened to Rose (Titanic) if she had married Cal (the "bad guy")and gone on to suffer the marriage/life restrictions of her era and class. It is very well-written in first-person and occurs in Victorian New York. Lucy suffers from "hysteria," a common diagnosis of female neuroses in that time, and her socially-conscious husband takes her to the new doctor in town, Dr. Victor Seth. Dr. Seth's treatments and ensuing relationship with Lucy create interesting emotional dilemmas for Lucy, her husband and Dr. Seth. The story and plot were original, absorbing and shocking: womens' health issues were not treated back then as they are today! I highly recommend this book if you seek a change from the "cookie-cutter" variety of historical fiction or romance novels.
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