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Book Reviews of Candle in the Window

Candle in the Window
Candle in the Window
Author: Christina Dodd
ISBN-13: 9780061085604
ISBN-10: 006108560X
Publication Date: 2/1999
Pages: 437
Rating:
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
 56

3.8 stars, based on 56 ratings
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Book Type: Mass Market Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

8 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Candle in the Window on + 541 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Christina Dodd comes thru with a wonderful medieval story about a beautiful blind heiress called upon to teach a recently injured knight how to live with his blindness. Lots of snap and sizzle!
sm avatar reviewed Candle in the Window on + 32 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I loved this book! Saura is one strong lady and just impressed me more and more as I read the story.

I was dearly in love with William - what a kind and tender heart he had. He was so good to Saura and wanted to make up for every pain she had had in her life.

One of my most favorite characters was "Bronnie". He made me laugh out loud everytime he appeared. The end when he is in the dungeon and "surprises" William was hysterical!

All in all this is one of my favorite stories I've read in a long time.
reviewed Candle in the Window on + 103 more book reviews
Lady Saura of Roget is breathtakenly beautiful, wealthy, intelligent, and living a live of servitude to the unscrupulous stepfather who controls her life. She is also blind. She has been summoned to the castle of William of Miraval by his father Lord Peter. The great warrior had been struck down in battle but now is blind. Under the guise of housekeeper, she must teach him how to deal with his affliction.
reviewed Candle in the Window on + 152 more book reviews
When his son, Sir William of Miraval, is blinded in battle, Lord Peter seeks out Lady Saura of Roget, the only woman in England who can help William. Blind since infancy, Saura does not allow her handicap to interfere with her abilities to run a household, ride a horse and live as normal a life as possible. Saura will not let William wallow in self-pity, but teach him to be self-sufficient.

Though wary of Lord Peter's offer, she takes over as chatelaine and turns William's keep into a well-run household and no one dare tell William that she is blind. Still wallowing in his loss, William taunts Saura and then begins to admire her tenacity, intelligence and strong will. She goads and sometimes irks him, but she gets him out of his drunken stupor. He believes she is old, or at best a nun, and she lets him keep thinking that way. But secretly, Saura is falling in love with William.

On a day's outing, they are abducted, and William is once again injured. During the night, Saura heals his wounds and gives him her love. When the dawn comes William's sight has returned. It is as if a miracle occurred. Having fallen in love with Saura blind, William is determined to make her his wife now that he can see.

But Saura feels that she is inferior, that her blindness makes it impossible for her to become William's wife. Yet even as William strives to convince Saura that she is the only woman for him, old-friends-turned-enemies plot to destroy their love and seize their holdings.
daedelys avatar reviewed Candle in the Window on + 1218 more book reviews
This was an overall okay story. William's sexist attitude early on in the story made it hard for me to like him. Saura, on the other hand, was an unusual heroine who is easy to admire.

There were a couple of times in the story where it really felt like it could have ended since things wrap up and everything's mostly hunky dory. It was like the author was starting out with a shorter story, but just made it drag on instead.

Which leads me to how I found it annoying that the "stalker" takes so long to be revealed for who he is when his actions should have made it obvious.
Cali avatar reviewed Candle in the Window on
This is an older book, discolored and a bit dinged up but in tact and a read I really enjoyed! =)
reviewed Candle in the Window on + 3389 more book reviews
Lady Saura of Roget is breathtakenly beautiful, wealthy, intelligent, and living a live of servitude to the stepfather who controls her life. All this, and she is blind as well. She has been summoned to the castle of William of Miraval by his father Lord Peter. This magnificent Knight, Lord William, had been struck down in battle and now was blind.
Who better, to lead William back from the depths of his depression than another blind person, one who could teach him how to deal with his affliction. Saura was brought to William thinking that she was an elderly housekeeper for the castle, and the ruse kept up for quite a while as she slowly tore down the walls, William built around himself. Half way into the book, William does regain his sight, then he must do the healing, and the earning of Saura's trust as he becomes enraptured with this beautiful maiden as treachery abounds as a madman seeks to destroy both William and Saura. Exciting, and breath stopping suspense!

As usual for a Dodd historical, the passion and love scenes are hot. The secondary characters are a delight right down to the faithful dog, Bula! Fabulous story -
reviewed Candle in the Window on + 225 more book reviews
Lady Saura of Roget lived a lonely life of servitude - her fortune controlled by her unscrupulous stepfather - until she was summoned to the castle of Sir William of Miraval. The magnificent knight had once sworn to live or perish by the sword. But that was before his world was engulfed in agonizing darkness.
They came together in a blaze of passion - the ravenhaired maiden and the golden warrior who laid siege to her heart. Yet danger awaited them just beyond the castle walls. Saura and William soon found themselves fighting for their lives, even as they surrendered to an all-consuming love.