Worthy of Legend is the third installment in Roseanna M. White’s Secrets of the Isles trilogy. The first was The Nature of a Lady; the second was To Treasure an Heiress.
The Secrets of the Isles involves two different groups in search of legendary pirate treasure. One loves “the hunt” and the thrill of archeological finds. The other wants the fame and fortune of such discoveries and employs underhanded means in the race to discover treasure.
Lady Emily Scofield is good friends with the people in the first group. But her father and brother are the primary instigators in the bad group.
Emily has lived her entire life in the background of her brother, Nigel. Nigel was her father’s favorite, and his misdeeds were excused away. Emily is expected to desert her friends and show loyalty to her family. But she can’t.
Instead of writing off her family completely, though, she tries to show love to them. Her friends fear she’ll be taken advantage of again.
Bram Sinclair, Earl of Telford, is the brother of the heroine in the first book. He has had an interest in the King Arthur legends since childhood. As he and his friends piece together clues to the artifact that both groups are pursuing, he realizes what they are looking for might be related to King Arthur. They try to keep this information secret from the other group.
As Bram and Emily’s group works together, Bram is concerned for Emily. He recognizes her conflict with her family and her lack of confidence and self-esteem from having been dismissed and overlooked for so many years. As he tries to encourage her, he discovers a true treasure in her character and heart.
A secondary plot line involves Emily’s maid, Thomasina, who has, unknown to Emily, been violated by Nigel. When a young man from the islands becomes interested in Tommie, she feels he would not be if he knew what had happened to her.
A couple of my favorite quotes from the book:
And if she lost everything all over again . . . well then, she’d just have to trust that the Lord could do more with her shattered than He could with her as she was now, barely holding together. That He meant her to be a mosaic instead of a whole.
Your worth, Thomasina, rests on no one else’s opinion of you. It doesn’t rest even on you. It rests in the Lord. He sees your heart, your soul. And that is all the approval any of us needs.
Bram and Emily were background characters in the previous books, and I enjoyed getting to know them better. I also loved the humorous bantering between Bram and his friend, Sheridan.
I especially liked the fact that these books were in a place I had never heard of, the Isles of Scilly. Now I feel I know the isles and the people on them. And the time frame of the early 1900s isn’t one we see often in historical fiction.
I enjoyed these stories very much and am going to miss these characters.
I had to look up Isles of Scilly; I knew the name but that’s it. I always like when an author chooses a place/time a little different from the usual. I what a great testament to the author that you will miss the characters! This sounds like a good book.
Pingback: November Reflections | Stray Thoughts
I too love different settings. Pretty sure I have ever read anything set in the Isles of Scilly.
Thanks for sharing your review with the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge
Pingback: Reading Challenge Wrap-Ups | Stray Thoughts
Pingback: Books Read in 2022 | Stray Thoughts