Cover Image: Pengarron Land

Pengarron Land

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Member Reviews

I loved this book and it definitely lived up to my expectations. The characters were really good with great storylines. It had me gripped.

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Excellent story line which was gripping from start to finish. Great characters. I would highly recommend this book.

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Pengarron Land is the first of five novels set in Trelynne Cove in Mounts Bay in the year 1753. I expected the story to be similar to the Poldark novels but sadly this did not live up to it's early promise. I found the dialect difficult to read with comfort and the characters became unbelievable and frankly rather annoying. It's not a series I will be returning to....sorry!

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It is the first book in a new series and a comfortable read starting with the outrageous Old Tom selling his Cornish cove, home and his granddaughter to Sir Oliver Pengarron to pay off his gambling debts. It's a story of smuggling and an arranged reluctant marriage. Part of the deal is that Old Tom's granddaughter Kerensa marries Sir Oliver. She's angry about the deal and hostile towards Sir Oliver. She professes to love a local boy called Clem to whom she's engaged but can she forget him and find happiness with the charismatic Sir Oliver? I suppose it was better than being foisted onto an impecunious, wicked old man with warts on his nose. There is a variety of characters - villagers, fishermen, miners, farmers (some who double up as smugglers) and the gentry. The dialect was authentic but troublesome and slow to read.The imagery was magical. Thank you to NetGalley and Canelo for letting me read it.

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I was drawn to this book with the premise of Poldark. It really didnt live up to the expectation. Sadly it just wasnt a book for me. I couldnt get into it

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I always enjoy reading historical novels set in Cornwall, where i live. Pengarron Land is the first of five novels set in Trelynne Cove in Mounts Bay in the year 1753. I found the story similar to the Poldark novels with lots of scandal, smuggling and the dramas between the farming and fishing communities and the gentry.
The main problem i found was that some of the plots and characters seemed a bit to good to be true at times with very black and white characters who were either extremely violent and then suddenly mending their ways and becoming so nice and kind to everyone around them. Karensa and Sir Oliver Pengarron who married as part of a deal with the cove's purchase and seemed to live very happily within weeks of marriage, which didn't ring true for me as Karensa was betrothed to Clem, the farm laborer who she loved and had set her heart on.
I did however enjoy the Cornish setting and the story flowed easily. I would read the next book in the series to see how the story continues but i would like to see more depth and a bit more reality to the storyline. #PengarronLand #NetGalley

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Pengarron Land, by Gloria Cook

Review from Jeannie Zelos book reviews

Genre:  General fiction (adult), Historical fiction.

I fell in love with historical Cornwall after the BBC drama back in the 70's led me to reading all the Winston Graham novels. Many times! I hoped this series would be along those lines but sadly though there are similarities the story itself was too bland and uneventful for me.

It starts well, lots of promise but I was expecting the Poldark level of drama and it isn't here. There is drama but its very slight, easily over and everyone is so -well- Nice. Kerensa is nice, Oliver is nice, Beatrice starts off being harsh to Kerensa but...she's soon nice too,. Throw in others from the upper classes who welcome Kerensa (!), the villagers who are mostly happy for her, the wise but open minded vicar, the shopkeepers....you get it. Everyone is so Nice. Clem is to start with too but turns nasty, but even his jealousy has a stunted edge, he never really does much except moan and wallow in self pity.
Its not a bad book, felt very true to the period but I need more going on, more real drama, jealousy, angst, a bigger divide where Oliver marrying Kerensa would have caused a huge rift in society as it did in Poldark. I didn't really understand why he married her, Tom was greedy enough that he'd have sold the land anyway, and Oliver could have fond a more suitable to his position wife than Kerensa. He'd barely noticed her so its not like he felt one look and he had to have her. Knowing she was already set to marry Clem he's not the kind of guy who'd go against that just on a whim so his determination to marry her didn't really work for me.

The Poldark echoes don't really do this any favours, Oliver doesn't have the charisma of Ross, Kerensa is sweet but doesn't have Demelza's sharp wit and determination, Beatrice has shades of Trudy, but without Jud it doesn't really work. There's a kiddley run by a widow, the miners and their hard lives, wrecks on the shore and smuggling, even a Rosina with a bad leg but somehow it all feels so pallid.
I expected Oliver's contemporaries to be shocked, to be rude to Kerensa, for Clem to do more than wander round whinging, for the vicar to be spouting fire and brimstone, for the shopkeepers to be avaricious etc. Instead I read a novel that was probably far more true to the time period, but much less fun to read.
Its not a book I could dislike, its perfectly well written, just didn't have the excitement and drama the Poldark connection gave me to expect.

Stars: Three, a story I had high hopes for but which ultimately was just an OK read.

ARC supplied for review purposes by Netgalley and Publishers

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