Tuesday, February 16, 2010

The Hasty Marriage--1977

This week Betty Debbie and I chose two of our favorites to review. No this isn't my favorite favorite but, as I'm fond of telling her, I won't be able to review that one (Winter Wedding) until I've been to the mountain, so to speak.

Betty Neels wrote 130-odd novels and among them there are only a few outliers--sticking out like a cactus at a flower show. The Hasty Marriage is one such. It's dark, near-tragic and fraught with moments that (as silly as I feel doing it) make my throat thick with the sorrow of surrogate mortification. War and Peace it isn't, but don't let that stop us.

Laura Standish is 29--looking thirty in the face (what an expression!)--a Ward Sister at St. Anne's on Men's Surgical. She's clever, wonderful at her job, gets on well with pets and children, is a good little housekeeper/cook, has a pretty voice, is liked by everyone, is not pretty but is not plain either. She might be an Araminta and long in the tooth but her sterling qualities could have landed her a staid fellow named George with a flat and an elderly Morris some time ago. But she's not in love with a George with a flat and a Morris so she won't marry one. Laura is my daughter's name. I love it and I love her.

Reilof van Meerum is 38. He's 6'3" and has dark eyes and hair (silvered at the temples in much the same manner as Minjeer Nathan van Voorhees, I think). He drives an Aston Martin which I take as a sign of an impulsive nature and emotional instability. But he also drives a silver grey Rolls-Royce which means that he'll settle down like the Rock of Gibraltar in the end. He was once married to a girl named Esme who died of leukemia. Don't feel too bad though. He recognized long before her death that they were ill-suited. She was a gay young thing that liked dancing and parties. And he was a doctor.

Plot:
Laura has the rotten luck of falling in love with Reilof at first sight. There he is, the man of her dreams, standing in her sitting room...captivated by her sister. Hey wait! That's not how it's supposed to go. Betty Neels writes our heroes as indifferent or skeptical or secretly in love with the heroine but never, ever does she let them be genuinely bowled out by another woman.
Joyce is 20 and blond and blue-eyed and a gay young thing that likes dancing and parties...stop me when this starts sounding familiar. She's like Zombie Esme raised from the grave. Only now she has a moral black hole where her heart's supposed to be and it's sucking Reilof into it. Instead of employing his warp drive to blast off in the opposite direction, Captain Reilof is piloting his Good Ship Smitten into the heart of darkness. All engines go, full steam ahead! You can imagine him elbowing Laura down in his haste to get to Joyce's side as though he's learned nothing in the dozen or so years since his first disastrous marriage.
Joyce, who never does anything when Laura is around to pick up the slack, makes a decent show of being human...for a zombie bride. She offers to do the dishes and, er...that's it. That's the entire foundation for Reilof's good regard.
Laura, however, has to cook meals and entertain two old men (her father and godfather), as well as rescue a puppy and assist in putting the dog's legs in plaster (using her connections in the Casualty area of her hospital shamelessly) for Reilof to even acknowledge her existence. Ponder the unfairness of life. Here Laura suffers the pangs of the damned. That's her traveling the digestive track of a demon...

What follows is a really sad chronicle of our fearless heroine making up reasons to avoid going home if there's a chance that Reilof might be there. (And I'm not kidding. It makes me feel sad.) If she does go home, no one will bother to meet her at the station or be at home and she'll feel duty bound not to make Joyce look like a heel (because she's gone off with her Dutch boyfriend and left cold soup on the stove and dismissed the daily help for the day) in front of Reilof so will say something like, "So sorry I popped home without telling anyone..." All along she has to watch the man she loves looking like "he won the pools" over her silly twit of a Gucci-scarf-stealing sister. Ponder the inscrutability of love.
And then the day comes, as Joyce predicted it would, when hard-working Laura gets the call she's been dreading. If this were written today, Laura would have received this text:
It's worse when Reilof hops on the phone and asks for congratulations and then sounds bored with her when she summons the courage to give them.
I know what you're thinking. He's awful. He's a putz. He doesn't deserve her. Well, true enough but it's hard not to feel for the guy when you know what's coming. His relationship with Joyce is...er...unsustainable. He bought her a solitaire in a modern setting and if that isn't a recipe for a failed relationship in the land of Neels then nothing is. Also, he's been pretty stand-up throughout--treating Laura with unfailing, if casual, kindness. He's a jerk but he doesn't know he's being one.
Then it all blows up. Laura comes home early (to avoid seeing Reilof with Joyce) and finds the zombie bride packing. At first, Laura assumes that they want to elope and then Joyce utters the irrevocable curse: American. (Sound of screeching tires)
Larry the American (an invective comparable to "Ivan the Terrible" or "Vlad the Impaler") is young, short, plump and wears heavy glasses (don't worry Larry, you can get that fixed in a couple more decades!) so of course she throws Reilof over for him. See, being American, you can already assume several things about him. He'll be garish and splashy and talk too much about his wealth. He'll also stoop to dirty tricks like snatching a corpse bride from the well-cared-for hands of a Dutch doctor.
Zombie Joyce leaves Laura with a letter for Reilof explaining that he was old...blah, blah, blah...old-y, old, van old-stein. What she really meant to say was:
Dear Reilof,
I am the un-dead. I walk the earth prowling for rich men, hoping to steal their souls. Larry is always talking about how rich he is and as far as I know you might only have that one good suit and an Aston Martin. Your discretion worries me. Anyway, you know what they say, better the devil you know... Regards, Joyce
In walks Reilof on the shattered Laura who hands him the note, withstands his very personal nastiness and, before anyone knows what happened, is offering him a tentative proposal. That's right, she has to sort of propose to him because (and this is genuinely difficult to read) he says, "...she wouldn't need to be pretty; anyone will do after Joyce, there couldn't be another like her...I might just as well marry you." Seriously, that's how big a hole he's digging for himself and I give her a lot of credit for not chucking the side table at him and storming off to Mexico where the Minjeer van Voorhees are thick on the ground and they know how to appreciate mousy-haired short girls.
But I digress...
At their wedding she wears a turban which I don't even know how to forgive The Great Neels for. But it's a cheerful affair even though her headgear does its level best to damper things.
They vacation at Corfe Castle near The Blue Pool which is supposed to be lovely and at which she says something about how if she ever wanted to run away from anything really dreadful that this is where she would go. This is called "The Clue". Now, I've never been to the actual Blue Pool but here's a picture. I have been to the Canadian Rockies though and if I say anything about this picture it would be damning with faint praise.
In Holland she meets Reilof's partner Jan who is slightly younger than Laura. Reilof didn't bother to tell Laura much of anything about his house or his work or his life or his finances or his taste in herbaceous boarders...She gets it. She isn't Zombie Joyce. He didn't care enough. But Jan is nice in a My-relationship-with-him-will-be-totally-misunderstood sort of way.
Still, Laura is not one to mope. Even though Reilof is totally neglecting her (she takes up petit point--need I say more?) and being cruelly nasty ("A new Fiat? For me? You must love me, Reilof!" "Think nothing of it as I should probably have gotten one for the cook and the under-gardener out of common decency.") she swallows a lot of pride and becomes a success with his family and his friends and running his home.
But when he leaves for Brussels he is a bit high-handed in telling her not to drive the new car. So, like any normal woman, she stews about it for three days and then hops in the Fiat and heads downtown. Of course he sees her driving by (where happily he finally falls in love with her--the dingus), she saves a victim of a car smash, he finds her on the side of the road slitting open a trouser leg with a pen knife and is furious. A lovely row (British word alert!) follows in which he is almost certainly in the wrong and she is almost certainly in the right. (My favorite!) They agree to start over and things settle down for a time.
But dead zombies always come back from the dead and one day when Laura is thankfully fortified with a "not-off-the-peg" denim dress, in walks Joyce--which is the biggest leap of logic Betty asks us to take. Laura is supposed to feel glad that a denim dress, circa 1977, is making her look her best.
Joyce is a tad dismayed to see that Reilof is loaded and that Laura has him. Forgive the particularly American analogy, but Joyce was like the Number 1 Contestant in the Showcase Showdown of The Price is Right, viewing the showcases (read: men) with the privilege of first refusal. True, she had gambled on the fact that she was passing on the lesser showcase in favor of the car and the 7-day trip to Europe but after Larry turned out to be merely a pudgy millionaire she wanted what Laura had. Nastiness ensues.
Reilof comes home and Joyce runs to kiss him. Laura looks away but, here I have recreated what she was unable to describe.
Waters are muddied (mostly by zombies). Reilof thinks Laura has a thing with Jan and Laura thinks that Joyce has her hooks into Reilof. In an act of desperation, Laura buys a ticket to England and leaves her husband with a letter. Bridges are burned and she runs to The Blue Pool...because he'll never find her there. When he does (almost a week later) we get one of the most lengthy and satisfying of all Neels conclusions. Implied future-tense conjugal relations are hinted at. After what we've been through, we deserve it. I like to think that they will vow never to let zombie's ever visit them again.

Rating:
Lashings of whipped cream. I haven't bestowed this signal honor on any other book thus far but this one deserved it, I felt. It isn't the happiest or most romantic of La Neels' canon but if you're in a particular frame of mind (feeling put-upon or under appreciated) this would be a lovely book to sit down with and wallow. It is a dark subject matter for Betty but it could be worse. In the hands of a Brontë sister, for instance, Laura would have been suicidal throughout and Reilof would have found her body floating lifeless in The Blue Pool at the end.
It says much for our heroine that she is handed such a lorryload of lemons and keeps churning out lemonade. That's the reason I love this. With all the reason in the world to moan and whine and weep, Laura puts her shoulder to the wheel and pushes on.

Food:
"A providential head of celery" is found when Reilof comes unexpectedly to dinner which might mark the first time in history that celery has ever been referred to as providential, cheese souffle, sole au gratin and macaroons.

Fashion:
Joyce snatches Laura's Gucci scarf, the wedding outfit is a clotted cream crepe suit with a turban(!!!boo!), Charles Jourdan sandals, she wears a pearl-grey chiffon with a high bodice and a low neckline to meet her sister at a restaurant (that's what I call fortifying), she wears a blue shirtwaister to run away from Reilof.

45 comments:

  1. I have just found this! I'm laughing my head off! I've been reading Betty Neels since I was in junior high--a long, long time ago. I can't believe I have found fellow travellers. It will take me a bit to catch up on all the previous posts, but between making treacle tarts and fluffing pillows I should fit in time.

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  2. Another Betty, hooray, hooray! You've hit the nail on the head. All Neels readers are fellow travelers--a Sisterhood of the Traveling Bettys, if you will.

    So glad you found us!

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  3. Ooh, I haven't read this one, but it sounds AWESOME.

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  4. Welcome, Betty JoDee! The Uncrushable ladies are awesome, and this is the best blog evah.

    And thanks, Betty Keira, for another wonderful review.

    I know what you mean about wallowing in the emotion -- I call books like this "EmoPorn," meaning a dark, poignant, swelling-strings, "before the dawn" build-up to a well-earned reconciliation and declaration of undying love. (It's why I love Fate is Remarkable so much -- best reconciliation scene ever, at least for those of us in parts of the world where driving in and through snow is terrifying! You West Coasters can only take our word for it.)

    Oh, and I'll forgive her the turban before I'll forgive her for a designer denim dress. Really? Silk jersey is so much better. (She would have loved microfibers, wouldn't she?)

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  5. I'm not sure this will work, but here's a link to Princess Anne in a turban hat -- still ugly, but if milliners to the princess royal thought they were au courant enough, Betty Neels may be forgiven for thinking so as well.

    (This isn't the Princess Anne in a Turban Hat photo I was thinking of, either -- so there's more than one royal turban...)

    \http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_mmBw3uzPnJI/Suhtyez_aUI/AAAAAAAA1Rg/joqO6iiQjJo/s400/royal_family_11.jpg

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  6. You can boost turbans all the live-long day, Betty Magdalen, but I remain immovable. Also, though I don't approve low necklines and tiny bodices in real life I can only thank Betty for throwing us a bone and letting Reilof get an accurate picture of what he'd be missing if he ran off with Zombie Joyce.

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  7. Makes me glad to live in a democracy. The minute one of our elected officials (male or female...) puts on a turban, that's it. I'm asking for a recall.

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  8. You take that back, Betty Keira. I am not a, a turban booster! \0/

    I'm just defending Betty Neels' regrettable taste in 1970s headgear by pointing out there had to have been some powerful iconography going on back then that the princess royal was photographed more than once wearing a turban. (Plus probably a mild hallucinogen slipped into tins of soup and beans...)

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  9. I heart turbans 4ever! Best review ever.

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  10. I'm not making this up--here's a wedding suit with a turban--and the bride looks so radiant: http://www.favorideas.com/images/suit-tulle-turban.jpg

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  11. If by radiant you mean prematurely old...I stand immovable on the subject of turbans! ;0)

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  12. I'm with Betty Keira on this -- I can defend Betty Neels' use of turbans as a fashion choice for her heroines in the 70s (c'mon, it's a fashion crime but there are better candidates for fashion high crimes & misdemeanors from that period--polyester, anyone?) but I can't personally defend turbans as a sartorial effort.

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  13. One of my favorite books. At least he has to sweat a bit before the happy ending. "emoporn," brilliant!!

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  14. OMG I looked at the pic of the bride in the turban how extraordinarily AWFUL! And OMG! Why didn't I find this before?! I read my first Netty Neels in 7th grade (I'm now 27) she has made me laugh and cry and I have never found a romance author that has made me want to find and devour every story they've ever written. My favorite will always be Caroline's Waterloo bc it was the first I read but this one is another fav. I felt silly afterward but Laura's story made me bawl like a baby, maybe because I can identify with her on some level, I don't know...

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  15. Oops! I meant ***Betty Neels!!!! So sorry Betty!!

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  16. If you bawled at The Hasty Marriage, you will definitely cry your eyes out reading The Secret Pool. I'm not a bawler but that was the only Betty Neels that did it for me -- so far.

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  17. I just finished reading this one. The Hasty Wedding is 1/2 box of tissue-box "read". The Secret Pool is at least a 2 tissue-box "read". The Hasty Marriage was so annoying until he saw her driving and knew he realized he was in love with Laura... - before that scene he was pretty NASTY for really NO good reason.... - The zombie was AWFUL and I see NO reason for a brilliant man like Reilof not to know this at once after being dumped. I DO like that it "jumped" off cannon so I can forgive. But really he was pretty Nasty and it was hard to like him (the book was good) but I have to say he's my LEAST favorite RDD in Neeldom. Litrik would be a favorite RDD of mine because if you look at it, he totally has a legit reason to be bitter. Litrik's right up there with Hugo van Elven and William Thurloe - Reilof- not so much for me. THOUGH I agree the ENDING is worth it... 1.5 page ENDING... Shocking! Betty out did herself with the ending pages- so I'd give it "queens of pudding" :)

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    1. 1/2 box of tissue-box "read" / 2 tissue-box "read" - I like that. The funny thing about this book is that, back in the 90s, when the title was re-launched, some whole-sale dealers had it listed as The Nasty Marriage. And you can still find the book under that title, as you can see.
      Personally, I like Reilof a lot. His nastiness forms part of the charm of this title for me, although I do feel bad for Laura, of course. Have a little compassion. The poor man got jilted. Right in front of our eyes. And he did not take it well.

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    2. And you can still find the book under that title, as you can see.

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    3. As you can see.

      Even on goodreads it's listed as The Nasty Marriage. :o)

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  18. Love this blog. Betty fan for 36 of my 47 years. Stumbled on my first book at eleven (1976 and found a book in the stands of people waiting for the Bi-centennial train to appear in Evansville In)and she has been a favorite ever since (though my dreamy 12 year old romantic self always imagined an American G.I. must have wooed and then crushed Betty's heart during the war to have earned us Americans her universal scorn ;) ).

    Anyway, thanks for such a wonderful place to revisit my love of Neels!

    About the turban... it was considered sort of fashionable in the 70's at one point because I remember my mom oohing and aahing over some pics of Liz Taylor in a white turban. I was young and thought it odd but my mom said it took a really elegant woman to carry it off... like Garbo did in her day. I had no idea who Garbo was back then but I never forgot my mom's excitement over that turban lol.

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    1. So wonderful to meet you, Betty Evansville, and what a great story of discovering TGB. I do hope you'll wander the pages of TUJD and share some more of your thoughts.

      I must say that even Garbo in a turban just makes me think that she must have needed to wash her hair, or at least that she had something to smuggle and needed a clever place to hide it. Kudos to those who are willing to try something different, but I shall stick with hats.

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    2. Ha ha! Needed to wash her hair! My mother had a former colleague, back in the 80s, who used to wear a turban when she needed to wash her hair!.

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  19. I always think of Liz Taylor, late 1960s-early 1970s, when I think of turbans.

    I found this vintage turban on Etsy. The colors are different, of course, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was similar.

    And of course, a woman's dress turban isn't the same as a ritual turban from a religious tradition.

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    1. Shouldn't a turban be a wrapped affair? This pleated Pucci-print head-topper strikes me as more like a pillbox or the basic shape of a fez. It does seem a much better bet for a bride than the Garbo-esque turban. But I'd vote for Laura in something more like this gold turban Kate Moss wore to a gala -- there are other celebs-in-turbans on that site, too.

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  20. Forgot to say that scarf-weight turbans and snoods are often worn by women going through chemo...

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  21. As usual, the review hits the nail head on. I loved the wonderful ending as much as I loathed Joyce.

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  22. I can't understand what Reilof sees in Joyce anymore than I can understand what Laura sees in him. I thought he and Joyce made a fitting pair, because they're both as deep as a finger bowl and Laura, well she clearly enjoys being a martyr.

    First she marries a man who pretty much hates the sight of her, then she puts up with all his crap, then she does / says nothing when the vulture comes back and kisses her husband and he starts playing up to it and lastly, she bravely decides to give him up because she loves him so. Ugh, I didn't like any of them.

    For me, this is the worst Neels book. I've read it once and never, ever again!

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    1. Oh, you poor thing. You've missed all the magic, all the beauty of this story. Speaking of beauty... Obviously, Reilof was blinded by Laura's beauty. Happens to the best of them. And she knew how to charm him and wind him round her grasping little finger. Until she found other prey: Larry – American, younger, richer. better (=even more amenable).

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    2. Tsk, tsk. That should read Reilof was blinded by Joyce's beauty.

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  23. Absolutely loved this review. Actually did roll on the floor laughing out loud. Not really, but 14 year old son came in to see why I was howling. The story was a hard read. Reilof was not as bad as RDD in Saturday's Child - he had the emotional maturity of an 4 year old.

    I do think Laura went in eyes open. For Joyce's sake, she should be glad she did not marry Reilof. She would have been Betty-bound to perish in a car crash (as do all who foolishly marry wealthy Americans/South American oil barons).

    Found it hard to believe that Reilof would have made the same mistake with Joyce as he did with first wife. Doesn't he know by now that "beauty is as beauty does"...

    Laura and Reilof make an appearance in Britannia All At Sea with a baby so all is well.

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    1. We thought it was twins-a boy Reliof and a girl Beatrix Laura.

      Joyce is Reliof's mid-life crisis and as hinted by his family another testament to his bad taste in women. It is no wonder they are glad that he has finally found a woman who 'adorns' him in Laura.

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  24. With the re-run I am doing, it is a lot of fun to come back to some of these novels. I have always loved this one, I think because Laura is such a Briton!!! Once Reilof gets going he is OK too, but it is Laura's story.

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    1. Just a little add-on here, it was a tradition in my father's family to name the first girl in a generation Laura. I was the first girl born into my father's family with the family name. HOWEVER, because my father was overseas in the war when i I was born, I got slapped with an entirely different name! I have never gotten over it, as Laura has always been one of my favourite names!

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  25. absolutely HATE the book!!! Laura is kind of a doormat... seeing indifference, suffering humiliation - and she not only agrees, but PROPOSES herself, offers herself to 'poor, brokenhearted' (yuk!!!) man... and don't tell me because she is in love... if my copy hadn't been electronic, I would have torn it apart (obviously, I have deleted it!)

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    1. G a s p ! 😢 You...you... sniff This is so sad... sniff You don't understand! You have completely misread the Proposal Scene. They were both upset and angry. And, yes, she was in love, but that was not why she said, "Then why don't you?"

      Blogger and Firefox hate me again... Second try...

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  26. Ooh, I love a controversial book!

    Another Betty pointed out somewhere that this is a reversal book. So the question is, why is Laura considered to be a doormat for marrying a man she loved in the hope that his heart would eventually heal and he would fall in love with her? Isn’t that exactly what Hugo did in “Fate is Remarkable”? Was Hugo a doormat? How many RDDs have swooped in and MOCed a recently jilted PBN? Laura stepped aside when Joyce staked a claim on Reilof. Haven’t we all railed against sisters who flirted with (and in one case outright stole) boyfriends/fiancés of our heroines? She wasn’t being a doormat, she was following the sister code. Too bad Joyce didn’t believe in the code.

    I’m not sure where the “Nasty Reilof” comments come from. The only inexplicably cruel thing I recall Reilof saying was something about Joyce looking even more beautiful since she got married. That’s the kind of grenade Betty likes to throw in every once in a while. Otherwise he was actually pretty nice, once he got over the immediate pain of getting dumped by Joyce. I loved the ending (although I could have done without the “I could have wrung your neck....boxed your ears....thrown something at you”...language. What’s up with that, Betty?) (Also not fond of heroines who keep saying they have no looks or conversation.). If nothing else, this one should get extra points for generating such strong opinions. It’s climbing up in my list of favorites. It’s a fun rollercoaster ride. Both Reilof and Laura had to work for their HEA.

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  27. One of the tropes Neels frequently employed was the narcissistic mother and perhaps Hasty Marriage is less about the romance and more about the quiet devastation having such a parent(s) can wrought. At the heart of this novel is the sibling relationship between Joyce and Laura (or playing pop psychologist the golden child versus the scapegoat child). In small horrifying brushstrokes, a picture is built of a nine-year-old girl who effectively ceases to be a daughter (both emotionally and economically) within a family. (Laura’s bedroom remains that of a child’s, she is made to forfeit her place in medicine for no other reason than for Joyce to have an expensive education, acts as housekeeper from a young age when it is evident that resources were available to employ one, witness Joyce’s extravagance continually indulged at the expense of her needs, and heartbreakingly knows that her father wants a village wedding for Joyce but can scarcely be bothered with her own).
    It is into dynamic that Reliof stumbles and whether he fails as a romantic hero is the cause of much debate. While very unusual in the contemporary M&B, a hero in love with the OW who then proceeds to marry the heroine, it was not an uncommon plot device in the 1970s. (The most notorious example being Roberta Leigh’s Temporary Wife). Yes, Reliof immediately falls for Joyce and although tempting to think of Joyce as Esme Redux, there is a touching naïve about Esme of a social butterfly destined to die young. Joyce is a much different proposition. She is clever, well educated, calculating, beautiful and well a psychopath. Importantly, after an initial miscalculation, Joyce is aware that Reliof is not wholly indifferent to Laura and for the first time in Joyce’s life, Laura is a threat to something she wants and must be actively managed.
    Yes, Reliof is humiliated. Yes, he does take his anger out on Laura who witnessed Joyce’s easy manipulation of him (but he also acknowledges that there were red flags when he admits that the reality may be better than the dream). Herein lies the poignancy of the novel, their relationship survives Reliof’s bitterness as Laura not loved by her parents (despite her protestation otherwise) never expects to be loved in her life. ☹
    Putting aside Joyce for a moment, Reliof and Laura do have the conventional Neels romance. He offers her to do the dishes, he obligates himself with Lucky, he ensures Laura has a bridal bouquet, and realises he loves her when it is almost too late.
    Yet for all this, Reliof does fail as a romantic hero in his declaration. Threats of boxed ears and wrung necks are hardly endearing but crucially, though he does discern that she has been raised to think herself as plain and homely he never appreciates that Laura *needs* to be protected from Joyce. A romantic hero would put Joyce in her proper place and he never does.

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    1. I have to confess this is one of my favorite Betty Neels books..... not the most fun read, but Laura's thinking and actions are a lot more believable for the 1970s setting than they would be in a contemporary book. The only thing that jarred for me was the plot device of zombie Joyce simply showing up at Reilof and Laura's home in Holland, seeing as they were not exactly in the middle of a big touristy city. But I guess we have to forgive the odd plot device.

      I am in the middle of re-reading several Betty Neels books, and was wondering if others have also picked up on how TGB's negativity towards professional women (particularly female doctors) gets worse in her later books. Her early books (The Hasty Marriage, Wish With The Candles, etc) are largely sympathetic to women who wished to become doctors but could not, or who are medical students (the younger sister in Wish With The Candles) - even in Fate is Remarkable, where she casts the female doctor (Janet) as the "other woman" plot device, it is mostly a tale of misunderstandings. But later in the canon, particularly the books published in the late 1980's and 1990s, she gets pretty vitriolic about female doctors - they are at minimum trying to grab onto a (male) RDD/RBD's coat-tails, and are more often projected as not sufficiently feminine to fulfil the wife and mother contract! It is entertaining to speculate why this might be - was Betty more sympathetic early in her writing career because she had been closer to her own nursing days and remembered witnessing the struggles women faced to qualify despite being as good as (or lets' be honest - better than) their male counterparts? And if so, what drove her later hostility - was it a simple effect of aging, or did she perhaps have one bad experience with a female doctor and let it color her writing? In any case, here is hoping La Neels did not have a grand-daughter who wanted to study medicine....the poor kid would have had to choose between a rock and a hard place really quickly!

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    2. Set your mind at rest. Betty didn't have a granddaughter, she had a grandson - by her daughter Charlotte who had trained to be a nurse at Great Ormond Street Hospital, London. Betty's husband Johannes had gone into nursing, too, by the way, some time after they had returned to England.
      Betty Anonymous

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  28. I just caught something I never noticed before. When Laura meets Joyce in the airport, Joyce says Reilof was “off to Antwerp to do something or other vital for some old man,” but when Reilof finds Laura at the blue pool, he says when he called Piet and heard the Laura had been gone for hours he canceled his lectures, went back home, found her note and began to search for her. What happened to the old man?

    Betty Meridith

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    1. Betty Meredith, Reilof may have called Piet from Antwerp, after helping the patient, and he may have cancelled his lectures for the coming days. Presumably the patient was safe.

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    2. I have just discovered this blog... and I am loving it....I have all Betty Neel downloaded onto my iPad...I read and re-read the titles continuously...they are my comfort zone when I need time out...The Hasty Marriage is one of my favourites, and I certainly felt the pain of Laura when she realised that Reilof had fallen for her selfish sister Joyce...wow I did cry for her....even though things worked out for her in the end I could have kicked Reilof several times for being so obtuse...

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    3. Welcome, Betty Aussie Rob! 🍰 📖 📚
      The Hasty Marriage is in my top three!

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