Sleeping Beauty

Sleeping Beauty

by Judith Ivory

Narrated by Violet Primm

Unabridged — 11 hours, 12 minutes

Sleeping Beauty

Sleeping Beauty

by Judith Ivory

Narrated by Violet Primm

Unabridged — 11 hours, 12 minutes

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Overview

When Sleeping Beauty was published, it was chosen by the Romance Writers of America and Romantic Times as one of the top 10 books of the year. It also received a starred review in Publishers Weekly. A steamy retelling of the well-known fairy tale, Sleeping Beauty uses the classic children's story as springboard to a very adult quest. The beautiful courtesan Coco Wilde is famous for her ability to keep the wealthiest men in 19th-century London hanging on her every smile. But she maintains a careful emotional detachment from all admirers. When she meets Sir James Stoker, however, the raven-haired Coco is attracted by his radiant smile and dangerous eyes. Determined to capture her, James must find out how to break the spell of indifference Coco has pulled around herself. As the passion between Coco and James awakens, Sleeping Beauty heats up with the intensity of their love making. Vivid images, tumultuous emotions, and exotic settings add to the drama of their sizzling romance. For more thrills, look for Judith Ivory's Beast.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Following his spectacular African expedition, Sir James Stoker has become the darling of high society. At last, this coachman's son achieves fame, fortune and the Order of the Bath from Queen Victoria. And he is about to throw it all away with his obsession for an infamous Parisian courtesan. At 37, Coco Wild is eight years his senior and jaded in matters of love. She is flattered by James's youthful charm and gallantry, and though tempted, she rejects him. After repeated chance encounters, James breaks through her defenses to become her lover. Now, their association threatens his reputation, his chances for a formal title, his friendship with his mentor (the father of Coco's child!) and even his life. From Victorian England to Italy and Monaco, this fair hero plots his seduction of a mysterious beauty amid threats of greed, betrayal, treachery and political machinations. Ivory (Beast) enchants her readers with intense sexual tension, understated but powerful symbolism, great plotting and sympathetic characters who buck tired types. (June)

Library Journal

Newly returned from an extraordinary African expedition, geologist Sir James Stoker, now wealthy, knighted, and society's man of the moment, never dreams that his future is waiting for him in a London dentist's office. But lovely, mysterious, and totally scandalous Coco Wild attracts him as no one before and proves to be a challenge in more ways than one. Ivory offers a cast of well-drawn, sympathetic characters, a setting that vividly portrays the inherent Victorian conflict between appearance and reality, and a plot liberally laced with politics, jealousy, and greed. The result is a beautifully romantic fairy tale, exquisitely told and infinitely satisfying. Ivory (Beast, LJ 5/15/97) also writes as Judy Cuevas and lives in Miami, FL.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940170996254
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 03/11/2008
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

The light in the room grew hazy with the passing of a cloud outside. The incoming sunlight became muted, dust motes dancing visibly in the beam that poured through the windowpanes. Mrs. Wild turned toward him slightly, sitting crookedly in her chair, raising one elbow leisurely up onto her chair back. She sat on her discarded coat.

James meant to bring the conversation back to where it belonged, into the realm of inane chatter, niceties, all unpleasantness minimized.

But she said, "I think the Burtons and Livingstons of the world quite mad to pursue so much danger, let alone discomfort."

Exactly. James felt a little zing of rage, injustice. He found himself adding, "It's almost galling, you know." A kind of confession poured out. As if he were under the influence of laughing gas, giddily telling a stranger the truth. "A chipped tooth. It hardly seems worthy enough damage, considering I was at wit's end, lost, sick, and sure of dying in the midst of people to whom I could barely speak. I mean, I should be missing a leg, an arm, be wearing an eye patch. But no. Not even a scar. I am healthier and stronger than the day I left England. With nothing to show for three and a half years of hell but a tooth I banged on something or other on one of the numerous occasions when I blacked out and fell flat on my face." He let out a snort of disgust. "And within the hour, even that will be fixed—" He took a breath.

God, give him enough time and he would tell Mrs. Wild here his life's story.

His mouthful was hardly the heroic tack, hardly the vein in which he, the Queen, and the Vice Chancellor spoke of these things. James had not told his true feelings to a soul. Not even himself,apparently. For he was mildly appalled to hear these words—and feel the extreme satisfaction of saying them. They were so true. And here he was, pouring himself out to an unknown woman in a dentist's waiting room, just because she seemed to recognize the truth when she heard it and have some sympathy for it. Just because she had a pretty face and an understanding mien.

He pressed his lips together, not sure what he had done—other than discomfit himself considerably.

She smiled at him and leaned forward. Again the light touch of her hand over his, again quickly with drawn. "Don't worry," she said. As if she could read his mind now as well. "I won't mention it. I can see that you have embarrassed yourself by speaking so openly. But believe me, there is nothing wrong with being open. Everything right with it, in fact." She waved her hand as if she could wave away his concern. "And your secrets are safe with me. Honestly. I have no one to share them with. And even if I did, I never tell tales. It's unseemly, don't you think? To go around telling one person what another one told you? I mean, if a person had wanted someone to know, he could have said him self, no?"

James said quickly, "You are so right. Thank you."

She nodded, her mouth pulling into a smiling line, just the faintest humor. Then she held up her new silver case of cloves. "My pleasure," she said, repeating his words, indicating an exchange.

Rightly or wrongly, James felt his distress ease. Apparently, a cozy dentist's parlor could be a haven for a few minutes, a place to babble in safety. For that was certainly how it seemed.

The strangely charming Mrs. Wild stood. From her chair James picked up her coat, a loose, silky bundle of dense fur. He held it for her. It was not bulky, but rather the well-trimmed, feather-soft undercoat of a winter animal. The label sewn into the satin lining bore a name: Wonh. And a city: Paris. The coat perfectly matched the fur at her cuffs and collar and the small hat that sat back on her head. The hat's netting—studded at each juncture with tiny bits of cut jet—had been folded back, presumably so she could have her good, eye-mopping cry. The net sparkled with these bits.

James stared down at it as he helped her, an arm at a time, into her coat. A coat sublimely soft in his hands, the lovely weight of smooth, glistening fur that poured all the way to the floor. It was really a gorgeous piece.

As was the woman who smoothed her gloved hands down the front of it, then pulled the coat's collar to her throat, her fists tight about its edge.

On a whim, James said suddenly, "I have a party to go to tonight. In my honor, actually. I would be delighted if you would accompany me."

She glanced up, lifting one eyebrow. Her gentle smile became arch, faintly amused, faintly skeptical. She said, "You are a lovely young man."

The operative word was young.

"A dear," she added. She smiled again, less kindly.

All right, he had overstepped. It had been overly familiar for him to ask such a thing. As if he could pick her up off the street. But James found himself, since returned to England, not always in harmony with the rules of protocol and society. The same rules he had lived by four years ago occasionally struck him now as stupid, arbitrary. Why not? Why couldn't he ask a charming woman to go to an enjoyable celebration, and thus make it more enjoy able?

She said, "You must find yourself a nice young woman to go with you to your parties."

She reached above her head and lowered the netting of her hat over her face. For an instant—from behind the bobbinet, as her eyes held his—it seemed to be something more, something beneath all her chic and polite smiling: a flicker of indefinable sadness. Then it was gone.

"Thank you," she said again. Whatever James had seen, if he'd seen anything at all, she recovered quickly. "Please tell Mr. Limpet that I have decided to keep my terrible tooth a while longer." She laughed—once more the treat of that whisper-like sound. "I am just too attached to it, tell him. I can't give it up just yet. Maybe tomorrow. Maybe never. Thank you again, Mr. Stoker."

And, with a sway of sliding fur, the lovely Mrs. Wild turned and disappeared through the haze of motes and sun out the door into a bright spring afternoon.

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