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✼ ✼ Bonus Content: This edition includes the novella The Suitor ✼ ✼

After surviving the Napoleonic Wars, Sir Benedict Harper is struggling to move on, his body and spirit in need of a healing touch. Never does Ben imagine that hope will come in the form of a beautiful woman who has seen her own share of suffering. After the lingering death of her husband, Samantha McKay is at the mercy of her oppressive in-laws—until she plots an escape to distant Wales to claim a house she has inherited. Being a gentleman, Ben insists that he escort her on the fateful journey.

Ben wants Samantha as much as she wants him, but he is cautious. What can a wounded soul offer any woman? Samantha is ready to go where fate takes her, to leave behind polite society and even propriety in her desire for this handsome, honorable soldier. But dare she offer her bruised heart as well as her body? The answers to both their questions may be found in an unlikely place: in each other’s arms.

394 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published July 1, 2014

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About the author

Mary Balogh

221 books5,997 followers
Mary Jenkins was born in 1944 in Swansea, Wales, UK. After graduating from university, moved to Saskatchewan, Canada, to teach high school English, on a two-year teaching contract in 1967. She married her Canadian husband, Robert Balogh, and had three children, Jacqueline, Christopher and Sian. When she's not writing, she enjoys reading, music and knitting. She also enjoys watching tennis and curling.

Mary Balogh started writing in the evenings as a hobby. Her first book, a Regency love story, was published in 1985 as A Masked Deception under her married name. In 1988, she retired from teaching after 20 years to pursue her dream to write full-time. She has written more than seventy novels and almost thirty novellas since then, including the New York Times bestselling 'Slightly' sextet and 'Simply' quartet. She has won numerous awards, including Bestselling Historical of the Year from the Borders Group, and her novel Simply Magic was a finalist in the Quill Awards. She has won seven Waldenbooks Awards and two B. Dalton Awards for her bestselling novels, as well as a Romantic Times Lifetime Achievement Award.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 825 reviews
Profile Image for  ❀ Minesha ❀.
45 reviews119 followers
December 16, 2014
Reviewed for Buried Under Romance

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Big historical romance fan, are you?

Well, are you bored of:

* Rakes with mistresses at seventeen. Seriously? Did your mama never teach you about respect and equality?
* Matrons who yather on and on about snaring a wealthy husband.
* Stitch, sew, horseback riding, water colors, anyone? Balls and poor excuses for flirting?
* Miscommunication. Iloveyou declarations after sex. No PTSD after heroine kidnapping.
* Filthy rich nobs who hunt. Oh you pathetic sonofa *Shh*. Oh I do hate you’ll the most. Argh!
* Wedding night = we must do our duty. *Rolls eyes* Baby, your sperms ain’t running away. Get to know her first.
* Overflowing bosoms. Hm. This couldn’t be so bad, could it? *raises eyebrows*

There’s more. But we’ll continue this ‘areyouseriouslykiddingmetropesthatmakemeyawn’ list some other time. Okay?

Where were we? Right. Book review of Mary Balogh’s “The Escape”. Thank you very much Edelweiss (through MaryChen) for an early advance reader copy.

I liked this book. Really really did. Did not have those tropes I mentioned above.

“If you had been married and you had died,” she said, “would you have been shocked if your widow had wanted to dance three months later?”

So tell me, would you have been shocked?

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After surviving the Napoleonic Wars, Sir Benedict Harper is struggling to move on, his body and spirit in need of a healing touch. Never does Ben imagine that hope will come in the form of a beautiful woman who has seen her own share of suffering. And they meet in my favorite manner: He pounces on her. Quite literally.

Tramp had just returned with the stick she had thrown for him, and she was bending to retrieve it with one hand while she held her posy in the other , when it seemed that a thunderbolt came crashing down upon them from the heavens, only narrowly missing them. Samantha shrieked with terror, while the dog went into a frenzy of hysterical barking and leaped aimlessly in every direction, bowling Samantha right off her feet. Her buttercups went about in a hail of yellow, and she landed with a painful thud on her bottom.

Can you visualize this scene? I burst out laughing.

They meet again, at the church and he apologizes. And my dear readers, it was at that moment, I knew I was going to like him a lot. So humble. So patient. Exactly what a gentleman would do.

Samantha and Ben meet again, from casual acquaintances, they become friends. After the lingering death of her husband, Samantha McKay is at the mercy of her oppressive in-laws—until she plots an escape to distant Wales to claim a house she has inherited and being a gentleman, Ben insists that he escort her on the fateful journey. And they decide to have an affair.

But no, they do not jump into bed immediately. Simply them sleeping on the same bed brought about a sweet smile on my face and an ‘Awww’. They were just so cute together!

The pillow fight. *Swoon*

“You grumbled some nonsense and grabbed me when I would have beaten a strategic retreat back to my edge, and, being the gentleman I am, contrary to your unjust accusation, I remained where I was and allowed you to burrow against me.”

I constantly rooted for Samantha’s happiness. She had an overbearing husband but does not complain or whine. She wishes for more than being a nursemaid to her family and longs for freedom. Strong-hearted, she makes the best of her situation, enjoying whatever she can and I loved this about her.

“I am mortally weary of war and wounds and suffering and death. I want to live. I want to ... to dance.”

“I am not pleading for your pity,” she said. “Heaven forbid. My life is as it is. There are worse lives. I have never been hungry or literally homeless. No one has ever used physical violence on me worse than the occasional rap over the knuckles or smack on the bottom when I was a child. And now, I have been offered the gift of freedom and a hovel of a cottage and a small competence with which to enjoy it. Do you understand what a wonderful thing that is for a woman, Ben? I can be a new person.”


See what I mean?

Ben too. Oh, he is the kind of guy you marry and spend your life with. He is patient and listens to what people have to say, hardworking-he decides to work in spite of being financially well-off and is humble, knowing when to concede to the other person. Funny and teasing too. An utterly darling hero.

“I suppose it would be a bit absurd if every rider felt obliged to dismount and push through a hedge before he jumped it just to make sure that some stray pedestrian was not strolling along on the other side. He could, perhaps, cry out a tallyho! as he came, but that mind sound rather peculiar.”

He is injured but he fights. Does not let his scars keep him away from doing what he truly desires. He wants love. Forever Love. *Sighs* Not an occasional shag or two.

'He kept those ideas to himself at the early stage of his career. This was the time to listen and learn.'

Oh oh! My papa tells me that too!
*Smiles*

Ben could have wept. Not only could he remember how to swim, but also he could swim. He could move his legs without pain.
He could move.
Without pain.
He was free.


It is a story about rediscovery, renewal and forgiveness. Welcoming relatives who had once ignored you. Following your dreams and working towards goals. There is no villain or scheming family members. Everyone was mature and relatable. It is probably the simple love story our parents had. Big changes in life starting with small steps.

So yes, in the end, this story was a well escape from those ‘ouchmyheadhurts’ tropes I mentioned in the above list. And this particular cover is quite pretty, isn't it.

*Sniff*
Go ahead. Read it.
And tell us how you feel.
Profile Image for Ingie.
1,415 reviews167 followers
November 25, 2015
Written September 2, 2015

4 Stars - Solid good m/f HR in a great audiobook edition. I enjoyed!!

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I just finished the 10:30 hrs audiobook narrated by the very best and always fantastic Rosalyn Landor. So very good, mature and touching. No big drama, no suspense, just two grownups talking, feeling and experience new feelings and situations. ~ I just want more from this author and narrator.

*********************************************************

The Escape is the third novel in the Survivor's Club series about some friends "injured" in different ways in the Napoleonic Wars. We are now a couple of years later and this is Sir Benedict Harper and the young war-widow Samantha McKay's lovestory. It is my first book in this series.

He is crippled with very war-wounded legs. She just buried a not entirely kind husband (of very fine birth and family though..). He doesn't know what he should do with his life after his ended military career. She has morally unpleasant relatives and need both friends and a future home.

...They meet by chance and it all begins with a quarrel.
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Not much to say. Do you like and admire Courtney Milan's audiobooks, as I do, with this narrator, am I quite sure that this Mary Balogh romance may tempt you too. I like characters with some scratches and blemishes. I like books where they talk a lot. Books with simple, slow-growing love and believable ordinary heroes and heroines. Romances about those that aren't the most beautiful, sexy or lucky. Stories with some, but not overwhelming much, steam and heat. ~ You get all that, and much more, here.
“One does tend to assume that life must be far easier for others than it ever is for oneself,” he said. “I suspect it rarely is. I dare say life was not meant to be easy.”

Sit back —listen— and enjoy. This The Escape audiobook is simply delightful.

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I LIKE - to listening to this marvelous narrator
Profile Image for Duchess Nicole.
1,270 reviews1,544 followers
November 11, 2021
"I want to dance...

The best way to describe this novel...and any book by Mary Balogh, really...is simply lovely. It really was.

Ben and Samantha have both been touched by war. Ben was nearly crushed by his horse, crippling his legs. He can get around with canes but is in constant pain. Samantha's husband of seven years has recently passed away after six years of being an invalid. Her life has been a constant torment, nursing a husband who never loved her and living under the thumb of his overly pious family. Now she is free, but life is about to knock her down again...and again and again.

"She was, he thought, a woman desperately in need of a friend."

This couple has an easy way with each other. I could see them being best friends or passionate lovers, or both. They complement one another, and their relationship unfolds slowly and easily.

"His pain, she thought, was fathoms deep.

This was a very low angst book. It centers on family and hardships that come with a less than perfect past, with less than perfect relatives. Ben and Samantha help each other to accept their own lives and overcome their individual situations.

This author's books tend to have a similar feel to me. It's almost like watching a British made movie...less drama and intensity, more downtime and quiet soul searching. Lovely.

Copy provided by the publisher for review
Profile Image for Kristina .
957 reviews661 followers
September 16, 2023
Not really five stars on the reread, but probably four.
This was a highly emotional read, but also a very slow moving one. It didn’t really pick up and I didn’t feel invested in the characters until after the half way point. It was still a very scenic and lyrical read, as per Balogh’s usual style, and had all the trappings she usually puts into her books. There were many similarities though to the first two books in the series: villainous and disapproving extended family on the heroine’s side, a rescue by the hero, tormented past on behalf of both main characters etc. All in all it was a good read but I think reading these back to back to back just highlights the formula a bit too much for me. Still really enjoyed them and will probably continue back to back to back 🤣 because I’m in the zone, babieeeee.

This series is worth reading, but maybe pace them out. Book two is still, hands down, the best one. But this one had a dog and a heroine with a bit more feistiness so that was fun.
Profile Image for Dab.
325 reviews227 followers
October 2, 2023
The romance is a little meh, but this series has a therapeutic value that makes it a non-trashy comfort read and that’s something!

Like in the previous books both protagonists had gone through a lot and the point of the story is their growth rather than their relationship. They are both independent, strong characters and in a way their HEA is a prize for that strength and resilience.

I know life is not a competition in who has it worst, but still, reading about a man who is determined to walk even though doctors told him that he never would puts things into perspective.

However, especially compared to the previous two books, this one was not exactly a page-turner so 3,5 rounded down.
Profile Image for Jacob Proffitt.
3,185 reviews1,915 followers
September 19, 2015
This is book three of a series that I really don't recommend skipping around in; I mean each subsequent book has enough of the previous couples that it'd be awkward not knowing their details (it's a romance series, so it's not like you'd spoil the endings...). This one is on par with the others, though not the favorite that The Arrangement was.

I liked the couple well enough. It took them way, way too long to admit they liked each other, but I liked them well enough along the way so I was never tempted to abandon them. I particularly liked Ben's progress with his handicap and coming to terms with his future. I also liked that both were looking for independence even as they were looking at becoming a couple. Best of all, though, was

Anyway, it was a solid story with minor pacing issues for me. In all a solid read that left me looking forward to the next.

A note about Steamy: On par for the series, with three explicit sex scenes. So the middle of my range, though pushing higher due to their length. I also liked the subtext (and sometimes supertext) of body image and dealing with physical limitations.
Profile Image for Pepa.
997 reviews261 followers
September 16, 2022
Reseña completa: https://masromance.blogspot.com/2022/...

Una historia bonita, estupendamente escrita. Mary Balogh me encanta ♥
La historia fluye sin grandes sobresaltos, estupendo el personaje de Ben, con esa superación personal, esos personajes escacharraditos de la guerra que tanto gustan a la autora.
Samantha también me ha gustado mucho, una mujer que sobrevive a todo lo que la vida le pone delante
Pero, ese es mi pero. Creo que la historia es muy bonita y el mensaje es estupendo, pero me ha faltado más romance entre ellos, es como si todo saltara desde esa pasión compartida, de esa camaradería que provoca que dos seres en un mal momento decidan ser amigos, o algo más a un amor tan fuerte.
Por ahora, es el que más me ha gustado. es como si esa historia de amor haya quedado en segundo lugar ya que los problemas individuales de ambos son los que realmente mueven la trama
Profile Image for Dagmar.
276 reviews42 followers
December 23, 2023
Re-read December 2023:
One of my favourites in the series. Probably the most compelling HR series in existence.


Another favourite in the series. It's true, once you start a Mary Balogh book you just can't stop. Love the unique Hero and heroine and a very authentic story. Simply awesome.
Profile Image for Alba Turunen.
754 reviews240 followers
March 9, 2021
4 Estrellitas. Un relato realmente maravilloso, me ha gustado casi tanto como el anterior libro y estoy totalmente convencida de que éste Club de los Supervivientes es una gran serie. Y también siento una gran tristeza de que al ser tan buena nos la estemos perdiendo en países de habla castellana porque las editoriales no se han dignado publicarla.

"The Escape" sigue la estela del anterior libro, y también parte de algunos paralelismos. En "The Arrangement" apenas sabíamos de Sir Benedict Harper, salvo que era un baronet, que había sido duramente herido en las guerras napoleónicas, e igualmente pasó tres años en la finca del duque de Stanbroke reponiéndose. El problema de Ben con la guerra es que lo dejó lisiado de por vida, pero Ben se convenció así mismo de que volvería a andar y a bailar.

El libro empieza mientras se desarrolla el primero de la serie "The Proposal", en la reunión anual en Penderris, la casa de campo del duque de Stanbrooke. Todos los Supervivientes están preocupados por Ben, ya que lleva un tiempo melancólico. Tras la guerra, su hermano mayor murió, dejándole a él, un lisiado, el título y las tierras, su hermano menor vive con su familia en su finca, administrándola y él no se siente capaz de echarlos. De modo que para combatir ésa apatía Ben acepta una invitación de su hermana mayor, Beatrice, para pasar una temporada con ella y su marido en Durham.

Y en Durham será donde Ben conozca a Samantha McKay, una exhuberante mujer viuda, con la que tendrá un primer y desastroso encontronazo.

Samantha McKay se encuentra muy sola y desesperada. Con ella está su cuñada, con quien no hace muy buenas migas. Matilda, su cuñada, acudió a Durham a ayudar a Samantha durante la convalecencia de su marido. El esposo de Samantha fue segundo hijo de un conde, el militar y el oveja negra de ésa familia de puritanos insufribles. Samantha se casó muy joven y enamorada, para descubrir finalmente el verdadero y pendenciero carácter de su marido. Pronto se vio atrapada en un matrimonio que no la hacía feliz, y para colmo de males su marido volvió herido y lastimado de la guerra, para acabar pereciendo en una lenta agonía durante cinco años.

Samantha al fin se ve libre, lleva cuatro meses viuda, pero quiere vivir, quiere bailar y tener una existencia tranquila y pacífica, la familia de su esposo no la da eso, y ella no tiene una familia propia a la que acudir. Un día, paseando a su perro, Samantha tiene un desafortunado encontronazo con un hombre a caballo totalmente maleducado, y ahí será cuando los destinos de Sam y Ben se junten.

En "The Arrangement" supimos de Ben que había desaparecido y nadie sabía nada de él salvo que fue a pasar una temporada con su hermana. Pues en éste libro está ése viaje de Ben.

En un principio, los encuentros de los protagonistas son parcos e incómodos, pero poco a poco, Sam y Ben encuentran cierta afinidad cuando empiezan a hablar. El problema es que la sombra de la familia de su esposo pende sobre Sam, y se entera de que está a punto de perder su casa y su seguridad, hasta que recuerda que por parte de su familia materna, le dejaron una casita en herencia, en la costa de Gales. Ahí será cuando realmente empiece el libro, y Ben, a pesar de ser un medio hombre lisiado, que no puede andar sin sus bastones, se erija en el héroe de Sam y se convierta en un caballero que la acompañará durante el viaje a Gales, hasta lo desconocido de la familia y el pasado de Samantha.

El libro empieza muy fuerte, para tener un pequeño altibajo, pero una vez que nuestros protagonistas llegan a Gales, se deja ver como el romance de ellos, tan tierno y bonito florece, y la historia se lee en un suspiro.

No voy a negar que me ha encantado, casi tanto como el segundo libro. Éste Club de los Supervivientes llega muy profundamente a mi corazoncito tocando la fibra más sensible a través de sus protagonistas, héroes de guerra con heridas físicas y psicológicas muy duras, pero todo ellos personajes de una gran emotividad y deseando dar y recibir mucho amor. Mi señora Balogh sabe dar en el clavo y ésta serie no es una excepción.

Tampoco voy a decir que el romance haya sido de lo mejor que he leído, porque no lo es, es un romance sencillo, muy bonito, pausado, que se cuece poco a poco, y los protagonistas son personas que les ha tocado vivir experiencias muy duras y encuentran el amor en el momento justo para encajar de la mejor forma posible.

Por lo tanto estoy muy satisfecha con el resultado de ésta historia. Me ha encantado y me ha dejado con altas expectativas para los siguientes de la serie. Tras el éxito de los dos libros anteriores, estoy deseando conocer la historia de Flavian, el tartamudo vizconde Ponsonby, a ver qué tiene que decirnos.
Profile Image for Suzanne.
363 reviews54 followers
March 26, 2014
‘The Escape’ is Book 3 in Mary Balogh’s Survivor's Club Series and portrays the survivor story of Major Sir Benedict Harper, an ex career military officer who has been badly lamed by battle injuries in the Peninsular Wars.

After several years of focusing on his physical recovery and attempting to walk with canes, Ben is deeply depressed. He confides to his fellow members of the Survivors Club that he must finally accept that his physical disabilities are permanent and that the military career he cherished is truly over. However, he feels, “as if he had been set adrift on an ocean that stretched vast and empty in every direction.”

This is also the story of Samantha McKay, a young war widow. She is spiritually drained and desperately lonely after several years of nursing a faithless and spiteful husband, and being tyrannized by his harsh and judgmental aristocratic family. She yearns to “breathe”, find some degree of freedom and happiness. However, Samantha is completely socially isolated, having been imprisoned by her physical and economic dependence on her in-laws

Ben and Samantha meet by chance, develop a polite and friendly acquaintanceship, recognizing that each has suffered profoundly from the affects of the wars. They also learn that they share what they believe to be an impossible dream; each longs to “dance” again, to live life to its fullest.

However, when Samantha is threatened with permanent imprisonment at her father-in-law’s estate, she becomes desperate and turns to Ben, this new and slight acquaintance, for help in an urgent escape plan.

Samantha convinces a reluctant Ben take to accompany her on a lengthy road trip from Northeastern England to the Southwest Coast of Wales, where she owns a small cottage. Like other great road trip stories, the forced proximity and the shared hardship of the journey allow Ben and Samantha the time and opportunity to deepen their friendship and intimacy.

The road trip to Wales and the Welsh cottage chapters are my favorite sections of the book. I enjoyed the couple’s moments of self-discovery and growing closeness as they traveled through the Welsh countryside, absorbed the beauty of architectural landmarks, and the warmth of the Welsh people and culture. Balogh’s love for her Welsh homeland is evident throughout these sections of the book, but is far from being a travelogue.

I particularly enjoyed (as I have in so many Balogh novels) the swimming scenes. It is while swimming in the ocean that Samantha and Ben experience an almost childlike freedom, which is touching for two people who have been so wounded by life. It is also in the water where Ben discovers that he can still swim, recaptures a sense of lightness and physical freedom that he hasn’t experienced since the wars. It is in the water where the couple can experience physical intimacy and joyful lightheartedness. Balogh once again demonstrates in this novel the healing and liberating power of sexual intimacy. In Wales, away from the judgmental eyes of society and family, Ben and Samantha are empowered to take a chance to test whether they can trust themselves to be vulnerable to another’s sight, touch, and love.

Ben’s “chosen family”, the fellow members of the Survivor’s Club, appear throughout the novel, through reminiscence and as characters, continuing their devoted support for each other’s recovery and happiness.

‘The Escape’ is another tender and thoughtful romance by Mary Balogh.


Received an ARC courtesy of Random House Publishing via Net Galley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Jan.
984 reviews214 followers
November 9, 2020
A gentle read about two characters you can respect. Ben had been severely wounded in the Napoleonic Wars, and will never be able to walk without canes again. Samantha has spent the last months of her life tending to her late husband who was also severely wounded in the war.

The difference between Samantha's husband and Ben is that Ben is a man of integrity, whereas her late husband was not. Her late husband's family is also extremely repressive and puritanical in their beliefs, and they have kept Samantha confined and controlled. No wonder she decides to escape.

I did like the way the plot unfolded, but like some other Balogh books I've read, this one was a bit slow in pace. There was also not that much chemistry between the leads until quite late in the book.

So overall, a nice story, but nothing too gripping or memorable.



Profile Image for kris.
968 reviews212 followers
August 24, 2016
Major Sir Benedict Harper survived the Napoleonic Wars with major injuries to his lower extremities, limiting his mobility. So while exploring his mobility with a horse (pun somewhat intended), he nearly tramples Samantha McKay, stunning widow, and forgets to apologize. After this profanity-filled meet-cute, Ben follows Samantha to the wilds of Cornwall for angst and affairs!!

1. So, OF COURSE, we can't leave any familial stone unturned!! So when it was revealed that Samantha's estranged grandfather was still alive and living nearby I knew IMMEDIATELY that there would be a supremely convenient explanation of historical misunderstanding to allow her to ~~find her place in the world, with him doting on her all the while.

WHY. WHY MUST THIS BE A THING.

On top of the obvious complaints about this plot point, I want to shout for a moment about the fact that it seems to always be Balogh's heroines who have to ~forgive and ~forget and reforge their connections to their families (Simply Love being the worst offender to date). Like, Ben has a brother that he isn't necessarily close to (although the end neatly ties up that little plot point with a bow, gag me) but there isn't anything in the romance tied to his needing to address the estrangement at all. But the final few chapters rather seem to hinge on Samantha developing a relationship with her grandfather--partially for her own ~~well-being~~ and partially for Ben's future career (in a roundabout way).

And sure: females in the 19th century were better off with a network to rely on. Having family could prevent a lot of situations that men just wouldn't face, even if they were entirely alone in the world. So I understand that perspective (if that perspective is what is shaping the narrative at all, which I rather doubt).

But as this is a 'Regency' romance, with some very modern sensibilities, I DO doubt it. And I'm sick of it. Sometimes, a person's family is shit. Sometimes, a person's father or mother or grandfather or brother or sister is not a good person. Sometimes, the decision to isolate yourself from that influence is a good one. Sometimes, the decision to remove a toxic person from your life is the best decision that can be made. Forgiveness and togetherness mean nothing in the face of that sort of situation.

But that's never the case. Instead everyone is The Best and you need to embrace your family!! LOVE ONE ANOTHER, BUT ONLY IF THERE'S A BLOOD RELATIONSHIP. OTHERWISE, ANGST.

2. I'm going to say what I've said about a few other of Balogh's books: there's something very clinical about how her characters fall in love. There's absolutely feeling there, but it's so restrained and understated that it feels almost dismal and heavy and dull.

Like there's this scene where they basically schedule their sex. Samantha asks Ben if he'll come over the next day and swim and stay for dinner--after all the servants leave. The only thing that would have made it more obvious is if she'd shouted "PS BRING YOUR DICK #fingerguns" at him as he left.

And the worst part is I GET IT. Romance, love, sex--they're not always spur-of-the-moment things! Sometimes planning is necessary! Sometimes talking out the mechanics is a good thing! It makes sense to me! But remove all impulsiveness from the narrative and you're left with a dry thing; a serious, dour plot that plods on towards a happy ever after that feels like relief rather than radiant joy

I love Balogh for her feeling, and for her skill, and for her approach to romance. But I also dislike her a bit for making me feel so unsettled and restless while reading her books, wanting some hint of the Great Fall, hoping for her characters to stumble into love, into romance, into sex. Instead, they talk and talk and talk and they think and think and think; they tell themselves they are not ready for love, for romance, for sex; they tell each other they are not ready. They tell me that they are not ready and I want to rail at them all because THIS IS A ROMANCE NOVEL WHY ARE YOU WASTING MY TIME.

And when Samantha and Ben finally do acknowledge their feelings, it's great. And it's everything I tuned in for. Except the voyage gave me forty blisters and probably malaria and boy did I suffer.

PS BRING YOUR DICK.

Profile Image for [Aengell].
218 reviews117 followers
September 13, 2014
4.5 stars

Mary Balogh writes splendidly. I always think of her as the Godmother of Regency Romance. Not because she's a senior writer, but because her works are understated, laid-back. Most of HR authors write stories which could be set in modern times; partly because of actual plots, partly because of some heroine's mannerisms which simply do not belong to that era, and mostly because of the narrating voice. Balogh has a beautiful and fitting voice, where I always get carried away to the times of reading real classics like Austen and the Bronte sisters.

Her stories don't contain much passion, humour or lightness, but it fits perfectly to the storytelling. Balogh's novels are still livid, enchanting and breathtaking in their pureness.

This story is no exception.

Ben as the tortured hero is not awaking pity in me, nor does he become annoying after a time. He has the issue with his legs, but it's described in a realistic and believable way. He isn't much of an Alpha, but he is stead fast in his opinions, is a typical man (yes, a little Alpha is in every man, like a diva is in every woman, right?), and he has a great sense of humour.

I love Samantha. I could identify with her on many levels. She was unsecure, unsure and hesitating at the beginning, but I felt 100% with her. Balogh describes Samantha's "prison" in a suffocating and therefore perfect way. I squirmed and was nervous and hoped desperately for Samantha to get to her freedom.

Samantha and Ben together were a great couple, their relationship developed slowly, but without being boring in any way.

A true masterpiece, and I anticipate the next installment eagerly!
Profile Image for Geo Just Reading My Books.
1,371 reviews325 followers
September 28, 2019
Călătorie cu final neașteptat este o poveste dulce-amară. Care te sfâșie și te întregește, îți aduce lacrimi de durere în ochi și bucurie în suflet. Ben și Samantha sunt două suflete rănite care se întâlnesc în momente de cumpănă și care reușesc să se înțeleagă unul pe celălalt mai bine decât o făceau cu propria persoană. Au parte de sprijin și înțelegere, iar destinul este hotărât să le ofere șansa la fericire. O poveste plină de duioșie.
Profile Image for Preeti.
721 reviews
August 15, 2022
I cannot imagine, I ever thought of reading this series selectively. Because so far all three books are 4-5 stars for me. I didn't have this success rate even with MB's most famous 'Bedwyn Saga'. Though, I am trying to pace myself and not finish it within days.😂😂 And, I also think I should give some of the credit(10% maybe) to the narrator, Rosalyn Lander. She is without a doubt my fav female narrator in the historical romance/fiction genre. Recently I reread every Jane Austen book because Miss Rosalyn was the narrator.🤭🤭

This whole series revolves around the MCs who are survivors of the Napoleonic war/Peninsula war. This one, in particular, is the story of Sir Benedict(Ben), he sustained severe damage to his legs and now even after 6 years has to use crutches for support.

Samantha's sufferings are also due to war but in a completely different way. Her husband got injured and she nursed him for 5 long years. But, one thing common between both of them is their will to live and not just survive. And, they did learn how to live, not only because of their mutual love but because of self-acceptance.

Let me say this book is the epitome of how to write relationship development perfectly. They both met as strangers and then became allies, then friends then lovers and finally, in love. We can feel the emotions of the characters in every stage. The funny thing is MB created forced proximity and used it to amplify their friendship, not a physical relationship between them.

So, in short, you should read this one…
1. We are back in MB's fav- Wales …
2. The quintessential beta hero- Caring but not overbearing…MB has a knack for writing them.
4. Samantha🥰🥰🥰
3. The relationship development- Saying slow burn doesn't justify it.
4. Beautiful writing…yes we get some amazing scenes of mutual care/love between the couple but MB is overgenerous in her writing whenever She is writing, whenever we are in Wales.
Profile Image for Nelly S. (on semi-hiatus).
584 reviews143 followers
July 23, 2023
This is such a lovely story featuring two of my favorite tropes: a hero with a disability and a widow. Sir Benedict Harper is a wounded ex-military hero who feels adrift after losing the use of his legs in battle. He’s never wanted to be anything else other than a military officer and can’t envision life outside of it. Then he meets Samantha who is a recent widow crushed by the onerous conditions placed on her mourning period by the family of her deceased husband. She seeks an escape from her home and embarks on a journey to Wales, which Ben insists on accompanying her on to provide protection. Close proximity leads to an inevitable romance. It’s a slow burn with wonderful characterization, and it’s wonderful to see the hero and heroine overcome their personal demons as they open themselves up to love.
Profile Image for Juliana Philippa.
1,029 reviews969 followers
June 20, 2020
4.5 stars. Am really enjoying this series! They all happen within a short time period, some of them overlapping. Balogh does a good job each time of explaining back story and etc., but I do think they're still probably best read in order.

This story is super lovely. I love, love Benedict; Balogh is one of the few romance writers who frequently writes heroes that are not drop-dead gorgeous, and sometimes are even not physically perfect (can you imagine? perish the thought!!). He's so lost at the beginning, and completely understandably—he wanted a military life, he excelled as an officer and that's what he foresaw as his career, and that is no longer even remotely possible for him.

I also loved Samantha. Didn't have a great feel for her at the beginning, and felt like it could go either way—not that I might dislike her, but that I might not get a sense of her or connect with her. Thankfully, that didn't end up happening, and I found her to be a terrific heroine. Again on the physical front, I also appreciated that although Samantha is super beautiful, we're not told this over, and over, and over again, and it's not something that's constantly repeating itself in Ben's head.

The Survivors' Club Series
Book 1: The Proposal (unrated; not great) — Hugo's story
Book 2: The Arrangement (4-4.5 stars) — Vincent's story
Book 3: The Escape (4.5 stars) — Benedict's story
Book 4: Only Enchanting (4 stars) — Flavian's story
Book 5: Only a Promise (4.5 stars) — Ralph's story
Book 6: Only a Kiss (TBR) — Imogen's story
Book 7: Only Beloved (3.5 stars) — George's story

Recommendations Based on the Hero
Historical romances featuring heroes who also have significant physical challenges and/or disabilities.
4 stars. The Arrangement by Mary Balogh (blindness)
4 stars. Simply Love by Mary Balogh (several severe injuries)
4 stars. In Total Surrender by Anne Mallory (serious leg injury)
4 stars. Romancing the Duke by Tessa Dare (blindness)
4 stars. To Beguile a Beast by Elizabeth Hoyt (missing an eye, scars)
3.5 stars. It Takes a Scandal by Caroline Linden (serious leg injury)

Recommendations Based on the Heroine
Historical romances featuring good girl heroines who "break free" and go on a bit of a wild and crazy journey (sometimes literally) and takes a chance.
5 stars. Wicked Becomes You by Meredith Duran
4.5 stars. Follow My Lead by Kate Noble
4.5 stars. The Runaway Princess by Christina Dodd
4.5 stars. A Lady's Code of Misconduct by Meredith Duran
4 stars. McAlistair's Fortune by Alissa Johnson
4 stars. Devil in Winter by Lisa Kleypas
Profile Image for Judithrosebooks.
540 reviews1,605 followers
February 2, 2023
No me ha gustado tanto como los dos anteriores de la saga. siento que no se mantenía la tensión entre los personajes, la historia de ambos protagonistas me ha gustado pero me ha faltado ese romance, cruce de miradas... que hacen que tengas ganas de ver si terminaran juntos o no.

me ha gustado la protagonista en general pero al faltarme parte de romanticismo pues ha hecho que no lo disfrutara tanto y en parte, fuese perdiendo interés en la lectura... quizás por eso he ido alternando otras lecturas de por medio y ha hecho que me durase unos dos meses esta historia que normalmente me suelen durar pocos días, incluso horas.
Profile Image for Luana ☆.
617 reviews137 followers
July 26, 2023
This book is so cuuute. If you have read the series from the beginning you can clearly see how Mary Balogh writing has improved, the change is HUGE in the tone, it was not a tepid romance, it was beautiful and realistic and hot when it needed be. I loved this third book and I am looking forward to continuing the series.
Profile Image for Tenley.
326 reviews48 followers
January 22, 2023
I read three books in this series back to back and The Escape was my least favorite. While the writing was nicely done, I found the story to be rather dull. I felt that there was too much telling and not showing in this book. For example, many times, I was told by the author that the two MCs spent all day talking, or had many conversations where they spoke about things both trivial and deep but I would have preferred actual dialog versus a summary of all the things they discussed.

Also, I felt that the heroine's story dominated the book. Over and over again, it was her hardships that were discussed - not Ben's and I found her to be very selfish and immature throughout the story. As a result, I was not invested in their relationship.

Anyway, I'm taking a break from this series, but plan to make my way back.
Profile Image for Vicki.
1,207 reviews172 followers
June 3, 2016
This book, The Escape, is book #3 in the Survivors' Club series.

Sir Benedict Harper has tried to get on with his life after his horrific physical damage acquired on the battlefield during the Peninsular wars. He walks with crutches and had done his recovering with the other members of the Survivors' club at George Crabbe, Duke of Stanbrook's home.

Samantha McKay had attended to her husband for years after he too had been wounded during the wars. She had become a widow only four months before the two met.

Neither liked the other at first until they suddenly realized that they were attracted. It was quite the meeting.

Their home lives were in turmoil and neither one were secure with their homes. As things get even more unpleasant she remembers that she was left a cottage.

When she decides to go to her inherited cottage in Wales, Ben accompanies her there to keep her safe. It is a very interesting trip. They find themselves tempted by one another.

This is another magnificent story about wounded returning soldiers that have no hope of finding love and happiness. Mary Balogh brings the survivors lives out in the open and let them find a spot in the readers heart.

Mary Balogh shares their struggles during recovery and the hopelessness that sometimes surrounds him. Mary's characters are always well formed and full of life. They have personalities that make you feel like they are friends by the end of the book.

This is a book worth reading. It is one of my favorites in the series.
Profile Image for Starr (AKA Starrfish) Rivers.
1,119 reviews372 followers
December 9, 2018
Firstly, bonus point for the cover. MB seldom has hot men on her covers, and despite the little I see of him on this cover, that man is HOT. Not completely consistent with the image of Ben Harper in my mind, based on his descriptions, tho, but, hey, always happy to have HOT inspiration for my imagination as I read.

Ben is an officer crippled by war. He's incredibly brave and through and through a gentleman. I love this type of hero!

Samantha is a widow. She was married to a gorgeous soldier who was too in love with himself and also suffered wounds from war, but is the complete opposite of Ben in terms of personality - he was unfaithful, conceited, selfish, spoiled. But she was loyal to him and once he died, she wanted to live again (or live for the first time)

They went on an "escape" together, a getaway, and it started out as friends. He certainly did everything he could to resist her and do the right thing, but she wanted him and, well, she got her way.

What began as a simple affair, an escapade, became a real love (of course).

I enjoyed it. Probably won't reread it for some time, but glad I did this time.
Profile Image for Drache.... (Angelika) .
1,219 reviews112 followers
July 30, 2023
reread 07/2023
I'm enjoying rereading this series immensly. My mind can rest after exhausting days at work. It's perfect for me at the moment.
4,5 stars.
------
08/2020
Such a beautiful series... I adore every single book so far.
Profile Image for eyes.2c.
2,859 reviews91 followers
June 4, 2022
Sir Benedict Harper’s story is wound up in Samantha MacKay’s tale. Samatha is a recent widow being controlled by the puritanical strictures of her husband’s family. When her father-in-law decides to have her taken back under his eye, Samatha turns to Ben for help. Ben is struggling with what to do with his future. His brother is managing his estates and Ben can’t quite see himself in that role. Injured in the Napoleonic Wars, he’s able to walk using his cane’s but that won’t get him back into what he really wants to do, active duty with the army. And now there’s the beautiful Samantha needing his assistance. Another fascinating Survivor’s Club memoir.
Profile Image for Olga Godim.
Author 12 books80 followers
March 10, 2015
3.5 stars
In this book, #3 in the Survivors series, the hero Benedict had lost the use of his legs in the war. Now, a few years later, he is healed as much as he could. He walks slowly with two canes and he doesn’t know what to do with his life. His dream of a military career was crushed together with his legs during one of the battles against Napoleon. He drifts through life, searching for directions.
The heroine Samantha buried her husband a few months ago. During his long illness, she was a dutiful wife to him, nursing him and not complaining, even though she didn’t love him. Now, her in-laws are smothering her with their strict propriety rules. She wants to escape, to be free, to dance, but she has to wear unrelenting mourning dresses and hide her face behind a dense veil. She isn’t even allowed outside except to an inner garden or to church.
When Samantha decides to escape her in-laws and run away to a cottage she inherited from her long-dead mother, Benedict is compelled as a gentleman to accompany her.
I liked Samantha, liked and understood her yearning for freedom, away from the stifling conventions of society. Of many fictional heroines, Samantha most reminded me of Scarlet O’Hara. But then, Samantha is quarter Gypsy.
I also respected Benedict’s need to prove himself and his worth despite his crippled legs. Both seem to find their salvation in each other, but the novel itself has its share of problems.
I don’t understand the heroes’ mutual resistance to their growing attraction. It defies common sense and feels like a simple literary device. Some obstacle should stand in the way of the protagonists’ love, shouldn’t it? Let them resist it.
Another problem comes with Samantha’s grandfather. He is a successful businessman, an owner of several coal mines and ironworks. He should be smart and ruthless; after all it was a cutthroat business in those days. Instead he is as tame and nice as a puppy. I don’t believe it.
There are some other logical gaps in the plot and the characters’ development, but I won’t mention them to avoid spoilers.
Despite the problems though, I liked the story well enough. I won’t buy it but I’ll seek out the next novel in the series at our library. I want to know what happened to the other members of the Survivors Club. Three more books to go. The expectation fills me with contentment.

Profile Image for Carolyn.
2,203 reviews
April 6, 2014
ARC provided by NetGalley for an honest opinion:

Imagine walking on a path through a dark forest, alive with vines trying to hold you back, forever struggling to seek the light and escape, but lost for days on end. It takes every ounce of your strength and endurance to keep going forward until, finally, after many trials, you are free. When you finally step into that brilliant breath-stealing light filled with beauty, you find a new world unlike any you have known or experienced before. You are not the same person you were when you started your journey into that dark forest, but have come out stronger, wiser and more confident of what you want out of life and how to achieve it. This is what Mary Balogh's "The Escape (the Survivor's Club, #3)" reminded me of. Two lost souls, wounded in body and mind, limited and repressed by life's sometimes harsh realities and who, through fate or destiny, find each other and embark on their enlightening journey together.

Sir Benedict Harper was severely wounded during the Napoleonic Wars, finally accepting the limitations his catastrophic wounds have placed on him, and finds himself restless and struggling to find his place in his world. He is a member of the "Survivor's Club." The "Survivor's Club" is actually the Duke of Stanbrook's home, which is a sanctuary and place of healing for six men and one women who were severely wounded in one way or another during the Napoleonic Wars. I couldn't wait for Benedict's story, having read about him in Ms. Balogh's first two books in this series, "The Proposal" and "The Arrangement."

Samantha McKay is a recent widow of another casualty of the Napoleonic Wars, who has spent the last several years caring for her dying, selfish and demanding husband and who has been under the repressive thumb of her Puritanical father-in-law and sister-in-law. Samantha is drained, empty, disillusioned and longing to throw off her widow's weeds and step out into the sunshine and spread her wings.

Ms. Balogh did not disappoint with Benedict's book and it surpassed my expectations. As always, she is a brilliant story teller, painting every scene eloquently and beautifully, letting the story unfold, slowing revealing the hidden depths of each character. Unlike many Regency books where the hero is a breath taking specimen and the heroine is a "diamond of the first water," these two characters are flawed physically (in their contemporaries eyes at least). However, Ms. Balogh's shows that not everything is as it seems on the surface. That the heart, mind, soul and actions are far more telling and far more valuable assets to a person's true nature.

This book was simply perfection.

I highly recommend picking up all the books in this wonderful, warm, compelling series. I, for one, cannot wait for the next installment, "Only Enchanting."
Profile Image for Julie.
4,167 reviews38.2k followers
January 1, 2015
The Escape by Mary Balogh is a 2014 Dell publication. I was provided a copy of this book by the publisher and Edelweiss in exchange for an honest review.

After being just a tiny bit disappointed in the last Survivor's Club novel, this third book in the series gets back on track in a big way.
Benedict ( Ben) Harper and Samantha McKay are both scarred by the Peninsular Wars, but in different ways. Ben has finally accepted he will never be the virile, active man he once was after being wounded. He knows he will always be a “cripple” and now he must adjust to his handicap and start living his live accordingly.
Samantha is a young widow, who spent five long years tending to her wounded husband, a man who was so suffocating his death should have been a relief, but now she is still imprisoned by his family who insist Samantha stay in deep mourning. Her dour sister- in- law insist Samantha wear thick black widow gowns and she is never to leave the house , even to walk among the small gardens, and she can never ever go anywhere alone.
But, a hilarious chance meeting between these two lonely souls and a cute dog, will set them on a course they never imagined.

I could literally feel Samantha's restlessness. Good grief! She is still very young and longs to exercise, ride horses, walk her impish dog, Tramp, and live life to it's fullest. However, she is not allowed to even breath because of her husband's family and she is still dependent upon them at the moment. But, the safe friendship she develops with Ben causes her to finally stand up for herself.

Ben is horribly embarrassed by his first encounter with Samantha. Offering her his sincere apology and with her understanding of his handicap Ben thinks that as a widow, Samantha is “safe” company. He soon finds himself embroiled in her personal life and realizes too late she is hardly a “safe” companion as the two embark on an adventure together, one which will be enlightening, heartwarming, educational, and very romantic and sensual.

I was so happy to see this couple close the door on war and it's ugly effects on their lives and open a new door filled with hope, peace, and most of all love as they begin a new journey in life together.

Mary Balogh is an author I can count on to write a story with depth and not only sensuality, but with romance, which is something I miss sometimes these days. These characters faced horror and grave adversity, but had the courage to change the path they were on and were rewarded greatly as a result. This is a very sweet and emotional story, deeply moving and just plain good.
5 stars
Profile Image for Misfit.
1,638 reviews317 followers
September 22, 2014
3.5 stars rounded up to four.

I'm a bit torn on how to rate this one. I knew it was part of a series, but since I hadn't read the first books, I didn't have the emotional connection with the characters from the previous books that other readers would have. Because of that, the final chapters ending up being a tiny bit of a drag while all the "Survivors" were traipsed out for the ultimate HEA for everyone. Those who have read the prior books and had connections with the other "Survivors" would likely lap these chapters up like a cat with cream. YMMV.

Still, I enjoyed the story and characters a lot, and things took some surprising twists and turns that I didn't see coming.

Kindle copy obtained via library loan.
Profile Image for Caz.
2,966 reviews1,112 followers
August 19, 2024
Review from 2014

A for narration / B+ for content - 4.5 stars rounded up.

This is the third book in Ms Balogh’s Survivors Club series of books that follows a group of war veterans who were physically and/or mentally wounded in the Napoleonic Wars.

In The Escape, our hero is Sir Benedict Harper, whose legs were so badly damaged that he was told he would never walk again. Through a combination of his own sheer bloody-mindedness and the support of his friends, he has confounded expectations – and though he will never be able to walk without the aid of his canes, he does walk and is able to live a more or less normal life. Previously a career soldier, that avenue of occupation is now closed to him, and because he has still not worked out exactly what he wants to do with his life, he’s restless and aimless.

While riding one day, Benedict almost runs down a young woman who is walking her dog, and in his shock at how close he’d come to inflicting serious injury upon her, he yells at her and blames the dog for spooking his horse. When he calms down, however, he realises how ungentlemanly his conduct was, and determines to apologise to the lady for his poor conduct.

Samantha McKay is twenty-four, and a widow of some four months. Her husband of seven years has recently died following a protracted illness caused by injuries sustained in the war, and during that time she was his sole carer. Despite the fact that she discovered the truth of her husband’s selfish, philandering nature not long after their marriage, and even though he was fractious and demanding throughout the course of his illness, Samantha took “for better, for worse” at face value, and devoted herself to his care for five years. His sister, Lady Matilda, now resides with Samantha, and feels it her duty to squash every little piece of joy Samantha may be able to find in her life. Being in “deep mourning”, they never go anywhere other than to church, they must be heavily veiled when venturing outside, the house has taken on the aspect of a mausoleum, and Matilda is adamant that her esteemed father, the lofty Earl of Heathmoor, would not approve of their doing anything as sinful as calling upon a neighbour or going out for a walk.

But Samantha has had enough of living for others and has decided that now it’s time to live for herself. When Ben discovers the identity of the woman he almost mowed down, he asks his sister to accompany him on a visit, during which he manages to apologise to Samantha. They find it surprisingly easy to talk to each other about personal subjects and a friendship quickly develops between them. Ben invites Samantha to ride with him – and his sister, of course – but her intention to do that pushes Lady Matilda over the edge and she packs her bags and leaves in a huff. Samantha is rather glad to see the back of her – but when the coach returns a few days later, complete with several burly servants and a letter from the earl instructing her that she will be taking up residence under his roof where he can make sure she behaves in an appropriate manner, Samantha is distraught.

She remembers suddenly that she had been bequeathed a cottage in Wales some years ago by her great aunt. She has no idea exactly where it is or whether it’s habitable, but if she wants her freedom, then it’s her only chance. Ben has already planned to travel for a while and he offers to accompany Samantha on her journey.

The Escape is a beautiful story, lyrically told. Samantha and Ben are engaging characters, who are searching for something more, seeking to “escape” from certain aspects of their lives; Samantha from drudgery and the oppressive restrictions being placed upon her, and Ben from his purposelessness and the limitations he thinks his disability have imposed upon him. They admit to feeling an attraction, but Samantha is adamant that when she remarries, she wants it to be to someone untouched by war – she has had enough of living under its shadow. And Ben is struggling with many insecurities; he feels his injuries make him unattractive and that his disability makes it unfair to ask a woman to spend her life with him.

The love story unfolds at a leisurely pace, allowing Ben and Samantha to really get to know each other. Quite early on, they acknowledge that neither of them is in the right place to be able to pursue their mutual attraction, yet once Samantha has found her new home, and is on her way to becoming part of a family and community she had never known existed, she finds herself less and less able to envision a future of which Ben is not part. But she also knows she has to let him go to find himself, even though she may never see him again.

While sometimes, the whole “I love you but we can’t be together” thing can wear thin, in this story it makes some sense. It’s true that there doesn’t actually seem to be anything keeping Ben and Samantha apart, in fact both characters need space and time to come to terms with their respective situations, and both of them are wise enough to be able to see that. Ben, in particular, still has to finally accept that the life he’d forseen for himself is impossible and to find a new purpose in life before he feels able to share it with anyone.

The audio download also includes the short story The Suitor, which features the character of Philippa Dean, who appeared in the previous full-length novel in this series, The Arrangement . Philippa’s parents are pushing her to marry Vincent, Viscount Darleigh, but she is in love with Julian, the nephew of the Duke of Stanbrook who is the founder of the Survivor’s Club.

Rosalyn Landor narrates both stories, and once more brings her considerable acting and narrating talents to bear. Every character in The Escape is clearly differentiated, and I was most impressed with the Welsh accent she employs for numerous characters in the second half of the story. Her portrayal of Samantha’s gruff, warm-hearted grandfather is very good, as is her depiction of Lady Matilda, the tinny, nasal tone she assigns her perfectly encapsulating that lady’s small-minded rigidity of character.

At the beginning of the book, we are in the company of all the members of the Survivor’s Club – six men and one woman – and each of the men is easily identifiable through the effective use of a variety of timbre and technique, from Flavian’s stutter to the resonance in the duke’s gently authoritarian voice. Ms Landor’s interpretation of Ben is particularly good, a lightness of tone conveying his relative youth (he’s just short of thirty); and she uses numerous subtleties of inflexion to capture by turns his natural authority, his insecurities and his mischievous sense of humour. Samantha is similarly well portrayed, and Ms Landor does an especially good job of emphasising her frustrations and longings. This narrator always seems able to get right under the characters’ skins, bringing their emotions into vivid colour in a way which serves to enhance the listener’s empathy and enjoyment of the stories she narrates.
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