Briana @ Pages Unbound
Written on Dec 30, 2011
Dumas portrays Marguerite with great compassion, showing that kept women have hearts and feelings and are people, too. Despite their evident wealth and endless parties and operas, their lives are often hard. And one of the things they can never have is true love. The men who come to see them love only themselves. If the women fall in love, they are never believed, and their lifestyles cannot be supported by the income of only one man. They cannot be faithful if they want to be.
Marguerite tries to break her cycle, and gives up much to start a new life with Armand. Only society, and sometimes Armand himself, stand in her way. Camille is a book about love and freedom, told with beautiful words and deeds. Modern romances rarely come close to portraying something as moving and absolutely real.
This review was also posted at Pages Unbound Book Reviews.