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The American Heiress

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"Anyone suffering Downton Abbey withdrawal symptoms (who isn't?) will find an instant tonic in Daisy Goodwin’s The American Heiress. The story of Cora Cash, an American heiress in the 1890s who bags an English duke, this is a deliciously evocative first novel that lingers in the mind." --Allison Pearson, New York Times bestselling author of I Don’t Know How She Does It and I Think I Love You

Be careful what you wish for. Traveling abroad with her mother at the turn of the twentieth century to seek a titled husband, beautiful, vivacious Cora Cash, whose family mansion in Newport dwarfs the Vanderbilts’, suddenly finds herself Duchess of Wareham, married to Ivo, the most eligible bachelor in England. Nothing is quite as it seems, Ivo is withdrawn and secretive, and the English social scene is full of traps and betrayals. Money, Cora soon learns, cannot buy everything, as she must decide what is truly worth the price in her life and her marriage.

Witty, moving, and brilliantly entertaining, Cora’s story marks the debut of a glorious storyteller who brings a fresh new spirit to the world of Edith Wharton and Henry James.

"For daughters of the new American billionaires of the 19th century, it was the ultimate marriage to a cash-strapped British Aristocrat in return for a title and social status. But money didn’t always buy them happiness." --Daisy Goodwin in The Daily Mail


 
One of Library Journal's Best Historical Fiction Books of 2011

468 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 19, 2010

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About the author

Daisy Goodwin

30 books2,164 followers
DAISY GOODWIN, a Harkness scholar who attended Columbia University’s film school after earning a degree in history at Cambridge University, is a leading television producer in the U.K. Her poetry anthologies, including 101 Poems That Could Save Your Life, have introduced many new readers to the pleasures of poetry, and she was Chair of the judging panel of the 2010 Orange Prize for Fiction. That was the year she published her first novel the American Heiress ( My Last Duchess in UK) , followed by The Fortune Hunter and now Victoria. She has also created VICTORIA the PBS/ITV series which starts in January. She has three dogs, two dogs, and one husband.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 5,029 reviews
Profile Image for MAP.
556 reviews214 followers
September 28, 2015
There are 3 things that happened in this book that made it an impossibility to take it remotely seriously, even if the rest of the book had been the pinnacle of sophisticated literature (it wasn't.)



Yes, within 15 pages, we have girls kissing, less than halfway through the book, an artist references what will become known in the 21st century as the progenitor of all uncomfortable anime-based bestiality fantasies (God, the things I learned as an art history minor), and...ok, well Constable Odo from Deep Space 9 isn't actually in this book, but there IS a character named "Odo" and this was all I could imagine.

Beyond all that, this book just wasn't what it was supposed to be. I got the sense that it was trying to be some sort of mix of Dangerous Liaisons and Upstairs Downstairs, but it got caught in this middle ground between romance and historical fiction, which makes it not romancy enough enough for the romancers and waaaaaaaaaay too fluffy and shallow for anyone interested in actual historical fiction. And never mind the fact that nothing, not one single thing, happens during the course of this entire book. NOTHING.

Oh, and I know this is snobby of me to say, but nothing makes me more annoyed than when I read little pieces of meaningless fluff like this and then there's "discussion questions" in the back of the book, like it's freaking Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five or something. There is nothing in this book that requires thought or interpretation. Stop pretending like there is. ARRGH.

Profile Image for Sam.
181 reviews
April 3, 2014
Honestly, I didn't enjoy this book. I hated Cora and what was with Ivo and his menopausal mood swings?
And all this calling people just 'Duke' or 'Duchess' when addressing them is absolutely horrid!! I cannot believe that I actually read this through.
Spoilers follow (sort of):
I can't ruin the plot, there isn't one.
I can't ruin the ending, it just stops.
There was one character that I liked in that entire book... and that was Bertha & to be honest, we get next to nothing to show if she will ever enjoy a single moments happiness. The author in my view spent far too long dressing people in Mouselline from Paris (very repetitively, I might add) & not enough time making things happen. When anything did happen in the book, she just sort of glossed over it... including a woman having her head set on fire (the set up ws far too obvious) & fisticuffs in the long gallery (well, sort of... ish). Things which I think were supposed to be really important didn't get the build up that they needed and other things were built up so much and then came to nothing. Besides all of which, what, after all of that, she just takes his word for it? I'd have enjoyed it more if she'd just married the van leyder hosen (I know that's not his actual name, but that's how it stuck in my head) from the get go & not flopped around the South Coast naming men Odo and Ivo & other strange & unusual epithets.

I don't often do reviews of books, but this is the second time I've persevered with a book of this ilk waiting for the plot to begin, only to find that there isn't one. Luckily, this was a library book, which will be going back shortly!
Profile Image for Siany.
455 reviews17 followers
August 11, 2010
I haven't really fully made my mind up about this book.

It wasn't a Mills and Boon type of book, it was more filled out than that and was over 400 pages. However if you were to ask me how it was filled out more, I am at a slight loss how to answer. To be honest, a lot of stuff probably could have been cut out of this and if wanted, could have easily have been made into a M & B...without the sex and loving hero that is.

The Duke Ivo - well he was pretty much a useless male lead. Usually the lead man in books has his faults but comes through in the end, and I suppose in his way he did. But I didn't like him and he had no redeeming features in my opinion.
Cora Cash (fab name) was actually a fairly likeable character in the end, she wasnt as spoiled and vain as expected, she really did marry him for love but couldnt understand why Ivo was the way he was with her. I felt sorry for her being lumped with him. But there were times that I was really annoyed with her and was silently yelling at her to grow a backbone and stick up for herself against everyone.

Really there were no characters that was relatable or even that likeable as a whole. Yet I found I couldn't put the book down, I had to know what was going to happen next. So in that sense it was a very good book because it had my curiousity aroused. The ending could have been better. Confrontations were building up throughout the whole book yet they kinda fizzled out at the end, which was disappointing.

I did like the author's style of writing, I just felt that the book was a bit too long, and it could have had some stuff taken out.

I suppose has a whole I did like it, but its not something I would read again. Once was enough. I am not sure I would anythng else from this author either.

7/10
Profile Image for James.
Author 22 books4,182 followers
July 17, 2023
I read my first book written by Daisy Goodwin, Victoria, when I learned the tv show was being produced. I wanted to get ahead of the curve on a rich history that's always appealed to me. I added the author to my TBH and decided this month to check out another one: The American Heiress, set in the 1890s near the end of America's Gilded Age. The Cash family is determined to marry their wealthy daughter to an English noble, and no sooner than they land in England does Cora literally stumble upon one. She's quickly engaged to be married and eager to learn how to become a Duchess, except there are many pitfalls and snakes out to harm her along that path. By combining fierce drama and the opulence of the time period, Goodwin has brought to life a compelling theme - to marry for love or necessity? I loved the entire book, including the characters and the plot. Cora was nearly perfect while the rest certainly had their fair share of complications. I would never have survived; I speak too plainly and directly without the need to trick or confuse those with whom I converse. Perhaps in a different era, I might have been different than I am today. I couldn't give 5 stars because I felt the ending was too abrupt. After a major decision about how to handle the marriage, Cora processes bad news and her decision to stay in England or return to America... and once that decision arrives, the book essentially ends. I wanted another few chapters about how things either turned around or changed for her future, including her maid and the various supporting characters. But that's just me, I like a tidy ending with a bow, even if it's not the conclusion that I wanted to happen to the characters. But I'm already eager to read another Goodwin book too.
Profile Image for Jennifer Louden.
Author 30 books240 followers
August 15, 2012
what a waste of time. I would like to go back and read Custom of the Country by Edith Wharton to see why a book like that sticks with me and a book like this only makes a plane ride tolerable. The writing is perfectly adequate but there is no depth, no real feeling.
Profile Image for Ariel.
585 reviews31 followers
March 21, 2012
I just loved this book. It was so up my alley. Two of my favorite books are Gone With the Wind and Forever Amber and this was sort of a mash up of those. Okay, this was not as a sweeping saga as those two books but it borrowed elements from them. There may have been nothing really new offered here but I don't care. It was the exact kind of story that keeps me turning the pages and removes me from the drudgery of housework.

The story centers around Cora Cash (love the name) who is rich beyond belief as we are reminded every other page. Her mother lacks only one thing that money can't buy, a royal title, so she dispatches Cora off across the pond to land a duke. Cora is rich and pretty, Duke is handsome and poor, bingo! The Duke and Cora come to the marriage with their baggage from the past in the form of Charlotte and Teddy respectively. Of course the path to happily ever after cannot be smooth or there wouldn't be a story. Cue the misunderstandings and lost opportunities and you have the bulk of this book with a dollop of happy ending like a cherry on top. The supporting members of the cast such as Cora's maid and mother and the Duke's best friend round out the story. I thoroughly enjoyed this book like a hunk Godiva chocolate.
Profile Image for Pat.
9 reviews12 followers
November 18, 2013
Slightly tepid period yarn that falls between the two stools of Romantic and 'Literary' fiction. Clearly inspired by the likes of Wharton, Waugh and Austen (indeed, in thrall to them), the novel simply warms over themes and story lines that were looking decidedly over-used two generations ago. People like Wharton were writing about their own time, of course, so the social critique had some point to it. Here there is none at all, unless we are being asked to believe that nothing has changed. The writing is sound, but far from sparkling, sadly.
Profile Image for Jenny.
152 reviews2 followers
June 12, 2012
Possibly the soapiest dish of a book I've ever read. If you're feeling Downton Abbey withdrawls this is the book for you :)
Profile Image for benebean.
1,024 reviews14 followers
September 12, 2011
I really really hate Ivo and Jim. How dare Ivo be so angry when he caused his wife to run into social problems by witholding information that would have made her more cautious. He keeps claiming to love her but then not only doesn't help her when she becomes hurt by his effort to hide his own indiscretions, but becomes angry with her. He never actually does anything for her when she gets hurt, and only admits what he's done when it becomes possible that he might lose something he wants. In other words, he's only willing to sacrifice for himself and not for her. That's selfish and NOT loving as he claimed.

I possibly hate Jim more than Ivo. He's only interested in getting laid by Bertha, never interested in her as a person. Even in the end, he breaks his promise of secrecy to her for his own selfish purposes-- namely he's worried he won't get to sleep with her anymore. If he was even minutely worried about her, he should have at least known that her mother had died or that her mother was ill. Also, I never understood how tricking/cleverly manipulating a guy into marrying you would seem like a good idea. Why would you want to be with a guy who didn't want to be with you without you needing to use guile. And why would you want to be with Jim even if you didn't need to use guile?!

The best part of this book was the comparison between the relationships between servants and masters in England and the U.S. and how the cultures differed in both good treatment and maltreatment of their servants.

2.5
Profile Image for Yellow Rose.
38 reviews9 followers
August 21, 2012
This book is a complete train wreck Cora goes from a witty character to a complete bore and a fool.She is completely oblivious to the Dukes rendezvous with Charlotte even after she is told that the Duke has cheated from three people. Also the Duke escorts Charlotte in front of Cora and everyone else making it obvious that they are lovers. Once Jim tells about Cora's plans to leave him, then he explains himself giving no sound explanation by just repeating that he has not cheated with Charlotte which is a complete lie if the novel were true.

He is a poor excuse for a husband he leaves her alone during her pregnancy even though he knows that it is not her fault that the whole scene with the eccentric painter was devised by Charlotte. Even though I found Teddy to be despicable although I would have liked him
ending up with Cora, just so to make the Duke suffer for once. In the beginning and the middle of the novel I liked Cora's character then by the end of the novel she became completely spineless she could not even control the servants.

In fact my favorite character by far was Odo he exposed everything that needed to be exposed about Charlotte's and Dukes romance and made Charlotte's life unhappy. I did not like how the characters were separated so much and by far their was not enough romance, if however Duke was not in such a despicable situation with Charlotte then the whole lack of intimacy could've been ignored, however by the last few chapters I was disgusted by the way the novel was going and decided to give a one star. And believe me up until up to the eccentric painter I affair I was willing to give it five stars.

Overall if you have nothing other to do and you like super spineless heroines this is for you, but if you have better books and better things to do stay away from this garbage.
Profile Image for Stephanie Anze.
657 reviews120 followers
September 23, 2019
"Oh, Cora, can you believe that there are some things in life that can't be bought?"

Cora Cash has it all: youth, beauty, money and fame. Her family is one of the most known and recognized and their wealth far surpasses that of the majority. With a lavish lifestyle and wanting for nothing, Cora should be set for life except that there is something that her mother wants (for herself more so than her daughter) that can not be bought: a title. With this in mind, the Cash family set out from America to England to find Cora an English nobleman. In time, their wish becomes true and Cora becomes engaged to Ivo of Wareham, a Duke. As Duchess of Wareham however, Cora realizes that within these grand walls, life is far from being the fairytale she envisoned.

This was an entertaining and dramatic book and it read much like an olden days version of a gossip magazine. Cora Cash is a vivacious and headstrong young woman. Due to her wealth, she occupies a privileged place in society. None can match her zeal or economic reach. There is however something that the Cash money can not buy and that a status of nobility. Intent on having their daughter marry a royal, the Cash family leave New York for England. Amid dinners and parties, Cora is introduced to English society and by chance meets Ivo, the Duke of Wareham. Cora grows quite fond of Ivo and and is thrilled when he proposes. But much as Cora is marrying for love, she knows this is a transaction for both parties. She gets the status and he gets access to her vast wealth (which because of his family's debts and the wear & tear of the Wareham estate he definitely needs). Still becoming the Duchess of Wareham is a dream come true. But when the wedding and honeymoon are over, Cora realizes that the glamour, decadence and excesses of living as a royal helps hide much complicated and trying life. Its time to avoid scandals and follow protocol, though that is easier said than done.

I have to say that I quite enjoyed this book. Loosely based on the life of Consuelo Vanderderbilt (a real life American Duchess). The narrative flowed nicely and depicted 1800's England in all its splendor and chaos. Cora started out as naive and spoiled but grew into a much more confident and smart woman. Life as a Duchess is not all glamour and fun. The distinctions between the royals and the servants made for an intense and notorious contrast. Much as Cora has a title now, because she is American she is not quite accepted by the Wareham staff, English society or her motherin-law. I do have some qualms though. There were characters that, in my humble opinion, needed to be a bit more fleshed out. I am thinking about Mrs. Cash, the duke and his mother. I also wanted something more with the storyline about Bertha, Cora's personal maid. Another issue for me was the ending. At first I thought I must have missed a few pages but it was not the case. The ending felt too abrupt making it feel rather inconclusive and messy. All and all, this was an entertaining and interesting book. I now can not wait to read about the real Consuela Vanderbilt (coincidentally I already have American Duchess by Karen Harper on my shelves now).



Profile Image for Danielle.
17 reviews6 followers
September 6, 2020
Touted as the perfect book for someone missing the upstairs/downstairs genius of Downton Abbey, this story fulfills not only the historical aspect of wealthy American women marrying into financially-suffering English aristocratic families, but also the mannerisms, style, and attitudes of the day. What it didn't do, however, was deliver the intrigue and scandals of this fastidiously elite section of society. Sure there is scandal, but the reader (if paying attention) can see it coming from the first third of the story-- which begins a tedious waiting game while the reader turns the pages to see if the main character, Cora, will finally find something out. When she finally does, the villain is suddenly abhorrent. There is very little to preclude the attitude that arises from this character, who, has been rather flat for the entirety of the story. When all is finally revealed, the rest of the story wraps up in roughly ten pages, making The American Heiress a steep incline of a setup with a very small step of a conclusion. If you want to read about early 20th century fashion, overbearing mothers who will stop at nothing for a title, and the assimilation of an American into English society, then by all means, read this book. If you're looking for a story that will keep you on the edge of your seat and then tie up all of the loose ends in a satisfying, but thorough, manner, you may want to read something else.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Lauren.
248 reviews
July 16, 2014
The reviews I read for this book were wishy-washy and didn’t really give me a reason to not read the book, but it only took one to convince me to definitely read it…“Anyone suffering Downton Abbey withdrawal symptoms (who isn’t?) will find an instant tonic in Daisy Goodwin’s The American Heiress. The story of Cora Cash, an American heiress in the 1890s who bags an English duke, this is a deliciously evocative first novel that lingers in the mind.” –Allison Pearson. Um, yes please. Downton Abbey was my jaaaaaaam when it was airing a few months ago. I still love it although I’m trying this new thing where I don’t obsess/fangirl more than is healthy for me. (Damn those addictive personalities.) Anyway, diving into the Guilded Age through books was the next best thing. Not only did this deliver on historical atmosphere, but it definitely shared a similar tone with Downton Abbey that had me hooked. MINOR SPOILERS BEYOND…

We learn from the beginning that the Cash family is new money and has the biggest mansion on Fifth Avenue but Mrs. Cash wants more – she wants a title. Her only daughter, Cora, just so happens to be the key to that coveted title. In the beginning, Cora is trying to go after her longtime friend, Teddy, whom she’s been flirting with all season while their families summer in Newport (Rhode Island…the OC wasn’t cool yet.) Everything seems to be going according to plan for Cora before they set sail for Europe when a disaster at her coming out party leads her mother to become even more controlling. Once in jolly old England, Mrs. Cash makes it her goal to have Cora introduced to the best and the brightest of the entitled British. Cora seems happy enough but it’s become somewhat of a trend – rich, American girls looking for old, English titles – and some of the men are less than gentlemanly…until she meets Ivo.

The best part of Cora’s relationship with Ivo, in my opinion, is that it wasn’t a product of her mother’s scheming at all, simply luck of the draw. There’s an air of mystery about Ivo from the beginning and it seems to draw Cora in deeper before she even realizes what’s happening. Next thing you know, the biggest wedding of the year is taking place at Trinity Church in Manhattan (yes, that church) and Cora becomes the Duchess. Sigh. Let’s not talk about my love affair with the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge right now, ok? Ok. So she’s a duchess and everyone’s happy…or are they? Dun dun dun. The angst and the drama ensue and while it’s expected and heavily hinted at, the drama plays out quite nicely and it’s easy to still love practically every character (except for Charlotte, she sucks.)

The characters were fantastic in this book; just what I would want to read about in this time period. Whereas stories like The Luxe have failed to draw me because of their melodrama, these characters maintain throughout the story and their drama is minimal, all things considered. While no one is a saint in The American Heiress – the book opens with Cora practicing kissing with her maid – they’re all redeemable, relatable and attractive. Ivo is the epitome of tall, dark and handsome and even when I knew he was being shady, I still knew that he was good at heart. There’s just something about the way that Cora and Ivo were written that made you believe that not only were they meant for each other, but they’d also be good for each other. The experiences they had with each other weren’t what either had expected and the adjusting and difficult but believable and helps maintain your faith in them.

I wouldn’t call this fluff but it won’t tear your heart out either. It was a classically romantic tale that truly captured the essence of the Guilded Age and has me yearning for more. Definitely recommend this.
Profile Image for Evelyn.
462 reviews21 followers
March 10, 2013
Into every traveler's life (if he or she purchases flight reading in the rush before departure)some surprisingly good, and sometimes bad, books will likely fall. In this case, unfortunately, the surprise wasn't so good.

From its packaging--including blurbs and author 'endorsements'--to its very plot, this book shamelessly piggybacks off the Downton Abbey phenomenon. Even the young heiress's name, Cora, is shamelessly 'Downtonian'. I'd hoped for something that expanded on and maybe amplified the entire Gilded era experience of American Heiresses who married into the British aristocracy for the title and were married for the money they brought to the union, but this novel merely repeated in a lugubrious, unoriginal and painfully plodding fashion the same basic, all-too familiar plot points. Naive American makes a brilliant match, and with little prior preparation and no advance tutoring, bumbles into British upper crust society making a fool of herself in front of all those self-satisfied twits, till she unearths a startling (albeit highly predictable) 'secret' about her aristocratic husband.

The story was stale, the writing lacking any craft or finesse and there wasn't one plot 'twist' that hadn't been loudly and clumsily telegraphed from the get-go. You'd do better rewatching Downton rather than spending any time with this book...
Profile Image for Cora Tea Party Princess.
1,323 reviews861 followers
June 27, 2013
It was hard to read the beginning of the book - I did not care for Cora at all, not one jot. And it's always hard to care for a book when you don't care for a character.

I thought she was very VERY selfish. Hideously so.

But by the end of the book I found that I had started to care for her. I don't know when this started, because the character of Cora in the opening chapters was quite vile. But it was good that I had started to care for her - it gave the story more strength and showed that Cora had developed greatly as a character. It made my intense dislike for Charlotte and the Double Duchess stronger.

And Bertha is a great character, especially with Cora. I can't say I cared for her beau at all, but he was a bit of a prick, seemingly after only one thing. It was weird that the smart Bertha would want to be with him, but maybe he was the only one to see through the colour of her skin (or maybe that was the reason for his attraction).
Profile Image for Jan.
1,006 reviews225 followers
November 24, 2017
It took me a while to get through this one. It was a fairly 'meaty' read. Set in the 1890s, it begins in the US, the time of the 'Gilded Age'. Although it's fiction, some have suggested the MC, Cora Cash, extraordinarily rich American 'princess', is loosely based on the real-life Consuelo Vanderbilt, who also married an English duke.

Although it's a fascinating period to read about, I didn't really enjoy the first section of the book. This was mainly due to the repulsive character of Cora's mother. She was depicted as desperate to marry her daughter off to a title, preferably a duke, and nothing was going to stand in her way. Mrs Cash is shown to be extremely bullying towards Cora, her only child. Manipulative, controlling, cruel, vulgar, overly competitive, egotistical, are all words that could be used to describe her. Cora seemed like a reasonable enough person, but her character was quite flat beside her revolting mother. I wanted to see more of Cora's personality shine through, and I wanted to see far less of her horrible parents. (Her father brazenly had a string of mistresses, buying his wife off with new jewellery each time he got a new mistress. Ugh!!)

Once the Cashes moved to England (so Cora could ensnare her 'title'), the story took a more interesting turn. Cora soon met Ivo, Duke of Wareham, and they were genuinely attracted to each other. Cora in fact fell in love with Ivo and was eager to marry him. But the writer revealed little about the real nature of Ivo, and readers are left uncertain of his true feelings for much of the book. It is clear he likes, perhaps even loves Cora, but what are his real motives? It is not until the very end of this quite long book that we actually find out. Obviously this is to create some suspense and to sustain the storyline, but this reader found it very frustrating. I wanted very much to see more of the inner workings of Ivo and Cora's relationship, and yes, I wanted more romance. It was all a bit too cool and unknowable for most of the book.

Bertha, Cora's African-American personal maid, was an interesting character, and a device that enabled us to see the 'below stairs' workings of the great houses, as well as a little of Cora's inner life. But other characters were almost as repulsive as Mrs Cash. Ivo's mother, Duchess Fanny, for example, was just awful. So cruel to both her son and to her new daughter-in-law. And Charlotte was also a nasty and unpleasant piece of work; cold and calculating and underhand.

One thing I didn't like about the book was the slighting references to the 'old world' English characters and places. The debutantes (apart from a few beauties) were described as if they were mostly ugly, inbred, insipid. The servants were mean and set in their ways. The houses were damp and crumbling etc etc. Only the Americans, it seemed, were healthy and attractive and had comfortable houses. While no doubt there were elements of truth here (!) the generalisations annoyed me and seemed disrespectful.

So the plethora of unlikeable characters didn't make for the most enjoyable read. I'm even on the fence about Ivo, as he did not give Cora the support and kindness she needed, even though he supposedly loved her. It didn't feel like it! Overall I think the book had a lot of potential, but I read a review that called it 'tepid', and I think that's how I found it too. Where was the passion and the deeply moving romance? Not in this book.......

Having said all of that, I think this kind of story could be made into a terrific TV mini-series. With a hot actor and actress playing the leads, it might bring some much-needed life to the slightly flat book as it is. I did enjoy the book on some levels, and I did finish the whole thing, but I was left with quite a few frustrations and reservations.
29 reviews
June 4, 2011
This book was deeply disappointing. Its no better than a historical Mills and Boon. I like a good historical Mills and Boon, but I need to know what I'm getting in for and 'My Last Duchess' did not promote itself like that at all.

Basically, an unlikeable, boring, American heiress falls in the path of a possibly likeable, maybe interesting impoverished English Duke. He proposes. She accepts. There are two awful mothers and each party has an exflame to contend with before they can find resolution and happiness in their marriage.

There was some suspense as I wasn't sure whether the conclusion was going to be traditional (duke + heiress = happiness) or shocking (heiress + exflame = happiness), but this was more because the characters were so badly drawn that I couldn't see any of them being deserving of the titles hero or heroine. I would have preferred the suspense to be because I cared about the characters and wanted things to turn out happily for them.

The only subplot was the romance of the servants, which was boring.

The author told the story from multiple viewpoints and sometimes from completely unnecessary ones, such as a milliner watching the wedding or a telegraph boy. It seemed to me that the author had found some interesting information about these professions and couldn't bare to leave it out though it didn't contribute to the plot or character development at all.

Verdict: Don't waste your time.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for B the BookAddict.
300 reviews772 followers
Shelved as 'abandoned'
April 3, 2014
puhleese! By pg 114, give me some picture, some back story, some description – something! I still have really no idea what Cora looks like, have little idea of her back-story, cannot picture any scenes that I'm reading about. This is set in 1890s American and English upper class society; a huge wealth of information could have be utilized in order to set this novel - it is a pity the author did not use it. The dialogue is empty, vacuous and - oh, why am I bothering here.

Take my advice - read something else!
Profile Image for Sarah Mac.
1,174 reviews
November 18, 2018
He looked at the older man's handsome, acquiescent face and he felt a wave of rage and scorn flood through him. They were all going to pretend that nothing had happened, they would leave the unpleasantness behind and go on serenely like swans sailing over filthy water. And Cora would have no choice but to swim with them, never looking down.


A fun book; easy to read & get lost in, though not terribly sophisticated prose-wise. But sophisticated prose isn't the goal here. If you want to wallow in a similar story type with glorious verbosity & detailed emotional response, read Edith Wharton -- she's a great writer, & no mistake. But if you want an engaging, relaxing story with escapist overtones, vintage clothing porn, & the occasional OMGWTF chuckle, read this one instead.

The above blurb features Cora's ex Teddy, who has the luxury of observing a rich American/impoverished Brit marriage from a safe distance...except even Teddy has a stake their marital success, because he had the opportunity to run away with Cora & was too chickenshit to do it. Such hyper-vigilant (or just plain curious) observation of Cora's life is a major motif of AMERICAN HEIRESS. Cora, despite initially preening beneath the microscopic gaze of so many onlookers, becomes increasingly disillusioned by the oppressive weight of smug expectation & hypocritical standards, particularly amongst her English associates.

It's a novel that veers into tragedy -- not like Hamlet or Oedipus, but rather the tragedy of a dead social structure & a people who were unwilling to bury it with dignity. Cora might be a spoiled, pampered chit with more money than God, but she comes by her attitude honestly. Ivo, on the other hand, is unbearable in his sneering, entitled hypocrisy & unwillingness to let go of a past that he doesn't even want (or so he claims). The overall attitude of British aristos in this book is positively nauseating -- but that's the point. Edith Wharton has a justified place in literary history, but entertaining trash like AMERICAN HEIRESS shouldn't be afraid to include a subtle (or maybe not so subtle?) dig at the people therein. Because like it or not, both sides deserve it. The conspicuous consumption of robber barons & holier-than-thou rituals of their British counterparts add up to the same ridiculously bloated self-worth & destruction of lives -- which is the ultimate message of Wharton *and* this book.
Profile Image for Heather C.
494 reviews78 followers
July 27, 2011
I have not encountered a novel that has been set (at least partially) in Newport, Rhode Island during the golden age of the “summer cottages” of the mega wealthy. It is such a beautiful setting and is probably one of the few settings in the United States that can evoke such a vivid world as European castles of old. Only a small portion of the novel is set here before it moves into well known Victorian England – but it still brought gorgeous pictures to mind.

It was also refreshing to read a romance novel for a change. This book treads more heavily on the romance side of the coin than the historical but there is enough there to certainly give you the sense of Victorian England. We even get to have Prince Bertie as a relatively important side character. It was also very interesting to see American upper class society juxtaposed against the English upper class – they were vastly different and it became quite an important plot device throughout the novel.

This was a great read and even though it ended in possibly not the most ideal situation it was still what I was rooting for. I even held off finishing the book for a few days because I really didn’t want it to end – it was such an enjoyable ride. I would certainly love to read another book by this author, it was a great debut.

And on a completely random note – I think the author had inspired choices for character names – I am particularly fond of Cora Cash!

he narrator was wonderful. She was a very flexible reader and had great accents for all of her characters. She had to switch between American and British accents throughout the story and I thought this was done seamlessly. At the end of the novel there was an interview with the author which was a wonderful treat. One thing that I found quite interesting was that she had never written dialogue before and so she would often read it out loud to hear how it sounded – which I think was perfect preparation for an audiobook.

This book was received for review from the publisher - I was not compensated for my opinions and the above is my honest review.
204 reviews
June 7, 2011
WORST BOOK EVER. This may be a slight exaggeration, but if "The American Heiress" is not the worst book ever, it's certainly has to be the worst book I've read in 2011. Or 2010. And in 2010 I read "The Help", so that's saying a lot.

I decided to get this after seeing it listed on a GoodReads newsletter. I have an irrational weakness for period dramas and ever since hearing that Julian Fellowes was inspired to write "Downton Abbey" by a book he was reading about the rash American heiresses who married into the British aristocracy at the end of the 19th century, I've been on the lookout for just such a book. I decided to settle for this novel, which seemed to be reasonably close. What a let down.

This is the simpering story of one Cora Cash, nouveau riche heiress who is taken to Britain by her mother to land a properly titled husband. Cora is completely unlikable and not really sincere in her desire to escape. She's said to be intelligent, but that seems to be completely missing from the actions of her character (much weeping and ordering servants about and playing duets provide her main occupations). The only really good character is her scheming mother, and even she only manages to put up a pale imitation of stage mom. The duke that Cora does eventually land (who proposes to her about two seconds after they meet, providing an unfortunate excuse for another 70 pages of what passes for drama), is stiff and uninteresting, but mysteriously has a passion for Cora. It mystifies me how anyone could feel this way, but I'm not the author. And then there's Cora's black ladies' maid, which not only is completely out of period, but the entire story line around Bertha the maid (yes, her name is Bertha) is so extraneous and pointless, and did I mention not correct to period, one wonders where the editor was when this stroke of genius was devised. And why is Bertha written in a dialect that is more at home in a minstrel show than a novel, even one set in the 19th century.

The "drama" seems pointless, but then there are the hints of romance novel that slip in. These could actually give a limpid plot some fire, but the author seems too afraid to really go all the way (if you will) with her sex scenes. Too bad, because taking this book into romance novel land is probably the only way it could have been saved. As it is, sitting on the border between bad novel and semi-bad romance soap, all this book does is severely disappoint.

Note to self: never read novels by British poetry anthologizers ever again.
Profile Image for MaryannC Victorian Dreamer.
540 reviews110 followers
August 31, 2011
I was totally engrossed in this book. The story is about a wealthy,spirited young woman during the late 1890's who has her world at her feet. Cora was self-centered,beautiful, spoiled and vain. But, I also thought she knew deep down what was ultimately inportant to her and her happiness. I loved the rich,sumptuous details of the ball gowns and the grand surroundings. I thought the author did an excellent job of portraying the haughtiness and wealth of the people of this era. I can only imagine what the Astors and Vanderbilts were like. For me, this was a book to get lost in with all it's wonderful descriptions.
Profile Image for Tracy.
650 reviews52 followers
February 22, 2017
I enjoyed this book quite a bit. I am a Downton Abbey lover and this book is very much in the same vein as that show. Cora annoyed me at times with how naive she was but she gets better and matures. I was worried it was going to end horribly, but it didn't. I would've liked a little more resolution between her and Teddy at the end there, at least for Teddy's sake, but I was glad about Cora ' s decision once Ivo spilled the beans. All in all it was entertaining.

If you too enjoyed Downton Abbey, then this book is for you!
Profile Image for Mindy.
339 reviews41 followers
January 14, 2016
I was in a bit of a book funk when I picked this book up. I had started to read several books, but this is the only one I couldn't stop reading. It was predictable in some ways but unpredictable in other ways. I enjoyed all the period detail and the upstairs/downstairs stuff. Definitely right book, right time!
Profile Image for nettebuecherkiste.
612 reviews164 followers
February 25, 2020
New York am Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts. Wie viele reiche junge Damen mit Aussicht auf ein großes Erbe soll auch die junge Cora Cash (der Name ist vielleicht ein bisschen zu offensichtlich gewählt) mitsamt ihrer Mutter nach Großbritannien verfrachtet werden, wo zahlreiche Adlige Geldsorgen haben und eine reiche Frau gut gebrauchen können. Eine Hand wäscht die andere, die ambitionierten amerikanischen Eltern bekommen einen Adelstitel für ihre Tochter, der britische Adlige kann sein Anwesen mit dem Geld der reichen Gattin retten. Wir kennen das Szenario beispielsweise aus Downton Abbey.

Cora selbst ist allerdings wenig begeistert von dem Plan und versucht, ihren Jugendfreund Teddy zu einer heimlichen Heirat anzustiften. Der jedoch will Maler werden und geht nach Paris. Also segeln Cora und ihre Mutter doch gen Großbritannien.

Die Ausgangslage des Romans der englischen Autorin Daisy Goodwin, die inzwischen vor allem als Autorin der Fernsehserie „Victoria“ und des zugrundeliegenden Buches bekannt ist, macht eine gewisse Vorhersehbarkeit zunächst einmal unvermeidlich. Allerdings gefiel mir der Anfang des Buches so wenig, dass ich kurz davor war, es abzubrechen. Ich fand die Dialoge furchtbar und die Beinahe-Instalove in diesem Fall besonders unglaubwürdig. Ich habe dem Buch aber noch eine Chance gesehen und es bessert sich tatsächlich. Es tritt eine Verflossene mit offenbar zwielichtigen Absichten auf. Ich wollte gerade einen Vergleich mit einem sehr bekannten Roman aufstellen, doch allein das könnte schon ein leichter Spoiler sein. Über den Titel des Romans besteht außerdem ein Bezug zu dem gleichnamigen Gedicht von Robert Browning (danke für den Hinweis, Servetus!), der einiges befürchten lässt. Erfrischenderweise gibt es eine Nebenhandlung mit Coras farbiger Zofe. Als ein großes gesellschaftliches Ereignis ansteht, meint die Leserin, genau zu ahnen, was passieren wird. Das tritt dann auch in etwa so ein, doch tatsächlich bleibt das Buch bis zum Schluss spannend. Es ist keine großartige Lektüre, aber ein unterhaltsamer Roman über das Gilded Age, auch wenn die Charaktere bis zum Schluss eher flach bleiben.
Profile Image for Carolyn Hill.
483 reviews80 followers
April 4, 2013
The American Heiress, which could have been a prequel to a Downton Abbey type story line, left me flat. The biggest problem was I simply didn't care for the characters. There's just not enough there to relate to. The poor little rich girl, Cora Cash, who has everything - looks, charm, intelligence, and the richest daddy in New York - is totally self-absorbed and, even though she's the victim of a merciless social-climbing mother, she never becomes sympathetic. Her maid Bertha, who could be more relatable, is treated so summarily that she never comes fully to life. While obviously well researched, the story remains superficial and the plot fairly predictable. Both social sets, the ultra-rich New York high society and the British royalty, are deplorable in their rigid pecking order, and delight in gossipy innuendo at the least and sabotaging rivals through scandal or destroying marital trust out of revenge at the worst. Not to mention total absorption in frivolous displays of unimaginable wealth. Just not a likable bunch, in my mind. There's really nothing in the way of social commentary here, though few would envy the lives of the wealthy, privileged, and aristocratic as shown on these pages. Can one find happiness within the confines of a tightly proscribed life, or must one risk the condemnation of society to enjoy freedom and a life of one's choosing? Or would that life be desirable without the fortune? This book does not attempt to answer the questions.
Profile Image for NyiNya.
20 reviews5 followers
November 2, 2012
Another entry in the "Buccaneers" genre, "The American Heiress" is something of a hybrid. Edith Wharton meets Harlequin Romance. Daisy Goodwin really, really tries to capture the flavor of "Custom of the Country" -- oh boy, does she try. You'll also find plot twists reminiscent of Jane Austen and the Bronte Sisters. But not in a good way.

The aptly named Cash family is rich beyond imagining. They buy houses, castles, paintings by Rubens, jewels, and 'the world's largest motor yacht' the way you and I buy socks. Cora Cash, 18 years old and a Raving Beauty, is the title hunter du jour...but author Goodwin can't quite make her heroine sufficiently mercenary. She leaves that to Mommy Dearest, a cold-blooded nouveau riche, beautiful but--in true Grand Guignol style -- hideously scarred and forced to cover half her face with veils. Mrs. Cash is determined to find daughter the best Titled Husband money can buy. Papa Cash is a minor character whose only purpose is to sign checks and provide an arm for the ladies to clutch when walking in to dinner.

The book gets interesting briefly when the Cash Family arrives in London and Cora gets some Buccaneer Boot Camp training from an American woman who makes her living teaching rich Philadelphia heiresses not to eat their peas with a knife or scratch where it itches. I'd like to have read more about the life of this enterprising woman and her unpolished gems...because once Cora gets her degree in Social Climbing and finds her impecunious but handsome duke, the story starts to tank.

Cora and her future husband have a cute meet...she falls off of her horse, he rescues her. Shades of The Torn Bodice Romance!

They get married, Cora makes some missteps in society...but there is no drama. Sure, some of the titled Brits are a tiny bit mean to Cora and take advantage of her American naivete, but heck, they're just jealous! Sure, Cora's husband keeps disappearing...either going fishing and missing his own wedding rehearsal or trotting off with the the British Heir Apparent on a trip to India and forgetting to tell poor Cora when he returns. And then, of course, there is A Major Complication. But not to worry, this is a love match and hubby's shenanigans keep getting explained away. Goodwin is obviously trying to cast a shroud of mystery around the duke, first making us suspect he is an evil fortune hunter, adulterer and a cad, and then quickly taking it back. She plays this card over and over and over again, imagining, no doubt, that she is whipsawing our emotions and keeping us on the edge of our seats. In fact, she is sending us off to see what's on television.

One of the subplots involves Cora's mixed-race maid, a girl who is born into Southern poverty, goes North and achieves a measure of success as a lady's maid. This too might have been an intriguing little side road, but was not sufficiently explored. I'd have liked to read more about how she adapted to the comic opera pomposity of Downstairs Society, the rigid hierarchies and rules maintained by the servants of the upper classes, and how she fared as woman of color, personally and professionally. That would have been a better book too, I think. Cora's part of the story has been told many, many times before, and better.

I'm giving the book a Fair rating, even though I didn't enjoy it very much. I think it will appeal to genre readers who don't want cynicism, irony, unhappy endings or originality to interfere with their enjoyment. The American Heiress is not a horrible book for the genre, it just doesn't go anywhere and takes too long on the journey. I kept wishing good old Undine Spragg would show up and kick some butt.
Profile Image for Camille.
215 reviews
September 18, 2021
I don't gravitate toward historical romances much, so I'm not exactly sure why or how I wound up with this one in my Audible library - probably a sale. I did love Downton Abby and I can sink my teeth into a solid Upstairs-Downstairs type of story, so this book meshed nicely with both of those niches. I loved the descriptions of clothes, homes, hair, deportment, etc. - and especially the differences between how England and the USA handled those cultural factors in the Gilded Age! The Americans were depicted as predictably shallow, headstrong, self-centered, gauche, naive, and shockingly rich. The Brits were depicted as backstabbing, manipulative, bored, judgmental, and regretably dependent upon the nouveau riche Americans to keep their valuable but disintegrating estates intact and solvent. I loved that dynamic!

The love story is rife with miscommunication, lots of headstrong, misguided decisions by the naive American wife, largely manipulated by the bitter and duplicitous OW, and the H's stormy, closed-off demeanor. All of the romance takes place behind closed doors. There is some question of how much of a presence the OW actually had in the marriage - while the H made a plaintive speech (so that his uber-wealthy and now less naive American wife wouldn't up and leave him and the crumbling estate without a benefactor), but I honestly didn't buy it. I feel like he might have been lying simply because of other evidence (cufflinks in the OW's bed, The OW clearly waiting in a peignoir for the H, reports from the valet of meetings and letters between the H and OW, no communication to his adoring wife). He simply had too much to lose to allow her to leave, so he told her what she wanted to hear. That was heartbreaking to me, but, I think, fairly historically accurate? We don't get an epilogue, so we are left to wonder about Cora Cash's future.

I'll listen to this again when I need a solid shot of predictable angst! :)
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
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