An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (2024)

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (1)

An Offer From a Gentleman

by Julia Quinn

Grade : B+

Reviewed by Andrea Pool

Grade : B+

Book type : Historical Romance

Sensuality : Warm

Review Date : June 8, 2001

Published On : 2001

artistBridgertonBridgerton seriesCinderella storyJulia QuinnNetflixTop 100 Romance

I’ve said it before: I’m a sucker for Cinderella stories. An Offer From a Gentleman definitely takes its inspiration from Cinderella.

Sophie Beckett is the bastard daughter of the Earl of Penwood. She knows it, and she lives in his home as his “ward.” He marries the wicked stepmother, Araminta, who comes with two daughters, Rosamunde and Posy. When the earl dies, his will stipulates that Araminta gets thrice the amount of money if she shelters Sophie than she would if she turns Sophie out. So Sophie becomes the slave of the house until a masquerade ball becomes the catalyst for her to be tossed out of the home. The ball provides the magic moment when Sophie meets Benedict Bridgerton, a mere mister but still a wealthy and eligible bachelor. Circ*mstances bring them back together two years later when he rescues her from being raped at a party. There’s a strong attraction, and Benedict feels responsible for her safety and finds her employment as a maid in his mother’s home.

Sophie’s my kind of girl, especially when she’s around Benedict. She’s sassy and smart, and their repartee reminds me of me and my husband. She stands by her principles, and she’s practical. She knows what is realistic between her and Benedict, but she also can’t control her heart. I like this girl.

Benedict starts off as quite the romantic. He falls totally in love with the mystery woman, and searches for her for two years. One of the things that attracted Benedict to the mystery woman was that she really didn’t know he was a Bridgerton when they met. In two years’ time, though, he becomes more experienced and a little more jaded. When he first met Sophie, he seemed to not have had much experience with women. When he meets her again as herself, he’s got enough experience to ask her to be his mistress, but he’s still not quite the traditional rake. Thank goodness.

When Sophie and Benedict first meet at the masquerade, they set off sparks. Julia Quinn convinced me that they had eyes only for each other, and that they did indeed fall in love at first sight. Their initial meeting seemed pretty magical for this reader. They still had chemistry when they met again two years hence. Benedict was captivated with Sophie-as-mystery-woman, and no other woman ever measured up as a potential wife. Benedict held out for Cinderella. When he doesn’t recognize Sophie, she doesn’t tell him who she really is thinking no good could ever come of it. This, of course, creates problems later.

The rest of the Bridgertons (from the two previous books in this series), Penelope Featherington, and, of course Lady Whistledown, all make appearances. Violet Bridgerton, the matriarch of the family, has quite a major role in the second half of the book, and the way she rescues Sophie and delivers justice to Araminta, the wicked stepmother, is priceless. The confrontation between Violet, Sophie, Araminta, Benedict and Posy, Araminta’s less-well-liked child, were quite possibly my favorite part of the book.

Benedict and Sophie’s romance ended quite satisfactorily. Julia Quinn delivers another winner in Benedict’s story. While the humor was less laugh-out-loud obvious than in other stories, it’s still here, as is the sweet love story and likable characters. Quinn also delivers a bit of a cliffhanger as Lady Whistledown decides to put down her pen and live life. I’m still not sure if I know who she is. I can’t wait for Colin’s story.

Reviewed by Andrea Pool

Grade : B+

Book type : Historical Romance

Sensuality : Warm

Review Date : June 8, 2001

Published On : 2001

artistBridgertonBridgerton seriesCinderella storyJulia QuinnNetflixTop 100 Romance

Recent Comments

Dabney Grinnan commented I actually love Phin's (Written on Your Skin) and James' (Bound By...

Caz Owens commented I think this is their best book yet - if you do...

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Jessica commented I'm tempted to buy a copy, just so I have it.

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (2)

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An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (5)

Robin

Guest

09/13/2021 1:25 pm

Like a lot of people, I got into the Bridgerton series thanks to Netflix! I’m enjoying the story in this third Bridgerton book, even though it’s the umpteenth take on Cinderella! :-) HOWEVER, I was disappointed to find that Ms. Quinn used contemporary language to convey the thoughts of people who live in Regency England (and the editor didn’t catch it). Sorry, but “who’s kidding whom” is NOT a phrase used by 19th-century Britons! As a former history major, nothing takes me out of a story like text not appropriate to a particular time. Nevertheless, I’m planning to finish reading the series and I look forward to the next season of “Bridgerton”!

2

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (6)

chrisreader

Member

04/28/2021 4:48 pm

I finally got around to reading this one. It was kind of a big nothing for me. Sophie didn’t show a lot of good sense. Every time someone tried to help her she pushed them off. Why was she still hiding who she was by the end? Most of the book made no sense.

It’s another one of those books that are based almost entirely on legal nonsense. Wills have Executors to make sure their contents are known to the beneficiaries and that the bequests are carried out. That’s all just ignored here so the crazy evil stepmother can have her way over someone who was acknowledged as his Ward. She wasn’t someone no one knew about, her father made legal arrangements for her.

I enjoyed Violet and the Bridgerton sisters in this book but Benedict was wasted and Sophie who started out sparkling, was kind of a drip.

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (7)

Dabney Grinnan

Admin

Reply to chrisreader

04/28/2021 4:59 pm

Totes agree. It’s a lesser Bridgerton.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (8)

Caz Owens

Editor

12/17/2020 7:16 am

This is one of the weaker books in the series, IMO, and not one I’ve been inclined to revisit. It’s not a bad book by any means, just not especially memorable in the way that some of the others are.

2

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (9)

Sonia

Guest

Reply to Caz Owens

12/17/2020 7:47 am

Agree… I just think there are two specific scenes in this book that colored my perspective of it into a less than pleasant one. However, I read it a long time ago and have not re-read it, nor parts of it (as I did with books #2, #4, #5 and #7, the ones I liked best) so perhaps I’m not being fair.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (10)

Dabney Grinnan

Admin

Reply to Caz Owens

12/17/2020 7:58 am

It was so bland compared to the one that preceded it. I too have never gone back and read it again. I have some memory that surely can’t be correct.

It’s kinda a spoiler so don’t read on if you don’t want to know anything about the book.

Did they have sex the first night they met up against a wall?

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (11)

Caz Owens

Editor

Reply to Dabney Grinnan

12/18/2020 3:53 am

The fact that I can’t remember probably just goes to show what an unmemorable book it is…

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (12)

AlwaysReading

Guest

Reply to Caz Owens

12/18/2020 5:22 am

I don’t think it is! They did make out against a wall though.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (13)

Dabney Grinnan

Admin

Reply to AlwaysReading

12/18/2020 6:25 am

That would make much more sense.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (14)

chrisreader

Member

Reply to Dabney Grinnan

04/28/2021 4:41 pm

Nope just a kiss.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (15)

Lisa Fernandes

Member

10/05/2017 2:54 am

Not my absolute favorite Bridgerton, but pretty good. Sophie and Benedict are adorable.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (16)

Amanda

Member

09/12/2017 1:16 pm

This is possibly my least favorite book in the Bridgerton series, tied maybe with the last one. I used to like it more, but the last time I reread (last year, maybe?) I just wasn’t feeling it at all, so it’s not one I plan to read again if I want to revisit the series.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (17)

Caz Owens

Editor

09/10/2017 7:06 pm

I have to say I’m with Blackjack in that I probably wouldn’t have included this in my Top 100. I’ve recently been revisiting the series in audio (as the first five books have recently been recorded) and I think it’s one of the weaker entries. I’ve got a soft spot for The Viscount Who Loved Me, which is the first JQ I ever read and my favourites are When He Was Wicked and To Sir Phillip With Love, which both showed how well JQ can do the less fluffier stuff. Still, it’s a strong series, and even the weaker books are entertaining and readable.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (18)

Blackjack

Reply to Caz Owens

09/10/2017 9:37 pm

I want to read To Sir Phillip with Love. That has long been in my TBR pile. Thank you for reminding me of it!

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (19)

Blackjack

Reply to Blackjack

09/10/2017 9:39 pm

BTW, I don’t know why my log-in image keeps changing. It’s so weird :)

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (20)

Caz Owens

Editor

Reply to Blackjack

09/11/2017 7:38 am

Sir Phillip was actually one of the two books in the series I had never read, and the reviews I’d read were somewhat mixed so I wasn’t sure what to expect. But I listened to the new audio recently and it was fabulous. Not a fluffy story and the hero is problematic, but there are good reasons for that and there were some real lump-in-throat moments.

2

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (21)

Carrie G

Guest

Reply to Caz Owens

12/17/2020 4:11 pm

I had a problem with the depiction of mental illness in To Sir Phillip,With Love,although overall I liked the book.

Spoiler!

The way we are guided to see Marina as a burden and an impediment to Phillip’s happiness made me sad. Quinn was gentle in her approach, but the end result was that we’re all “happy” Marina is no longer there. In the end, Marina’s clinical depression is a trope to give Phillip a sad backstory.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (22)

Dabney Grinnan

Admin

Reply to Caz Owens

09/11/2017 7:54 am

My favorite is Romancing Mr. Bridgerton distantly followed by When He Was Wicked.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (23)

Amanda

Member

Reply to Dabney Grinnan

09/12/2017 1:17 pm

These are my two favorites as well, but only flipped!

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (24)

Lil

Guest

Reply to Caz Owens

12/17/2020 5:15 pm

To Sir Phillip With Love is actually my favorite of the Bridgerton books, edging out even The Viscount Who Loved Me. I’ve yet to read An Offer From a Gentleman—something about it keeps putting me off.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (25)

Blackjack

Guest

09/10/2017 5:38 pm

I found this entertaining though the stereotypes of the Cinderella heroine in need of rescuing by the prince and the dastardly villains populating the story annoyed me too much to love the book. The heroine is plucky and feisty and in the end punches people and clobbers the hero by throwing a candle at his head. Not terribly relatable and not really a book I would put in a top 100 list, but then again Quinn is not really an author I gravitate toward.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (26)

mel burns

Guest

Reply to Blackjack

09/11/2017 2:31 pm

I agree, this book doesn’t IMO belong in the top 100 list.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (27)

Cindy

Guest

09/10/2017 2:14 pm

Hmm, I’m thinking I should read again too! I don’t remember a lot of those plot aspects.
Though I think I read the review carefully, I’m wondering why the reviewer did not give the book an ‘A’ -?

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (28)

Anne Marble AAR

Guest

09/09/2017 7:28 pm

I’m glad to see this one! :) I know I read it a while ago, but you’ve reminded me that this is something I should read again — a nice break from all the twisty psychological thrillers I’ve read lately.

1

An Offer From a Gentleman by Julia Quinn (2024)

FAQs

What happens at the end of the offer from a gentleman? ›

Sophie returns home with Benedict, where he has a bath drawn for her and they get a head start on their upcoming wedding night. They get married, and, in the epilogue seven years later, we learn that Sophie is pregnant with their fourth child.

Does Benedict find out who Sophie is? ›

Years later, Benedict is still pining for the masked woman. He meets Sophie and, due to a skew in circ*mstances, she cares for him when he's sick. Benedict likes Sophie, but he still holds out for the masked lady. Then he figures out she is the masked lady — gasp!

Is An Offer from a Gentleman spicy? ›

An Offer From a Gentleman

This book features forbidden love, mistaken identities, one of the leads asking his love interest to be his mistress, and a couple of very steamy scenes.

What happens to Sophie in An Offer from a Gentleman? ›

Despite Phillip's threats, Benedict doesn't back down, and forces him to let Sophie go. Phillip threatens to fire her, but Benedict simply says he'll get Sophie hired at his mother's house. Without any other options to avoid Phillip and his ragtag group, Sophie accepts Benedict's offer and leaves with him.

Who does Cressida Cowper marry? ›

In the books, Cressida Cowper ends up marrying a nobleman named Lord Twombley. Her marriage takes place in 'An Offer From A Gentleman', which is the third book in the series, taking place before Colin and Penelope's love story.

Who does Eloise marry? ›

In fifth Bridgerton book, To Sir Phillip, With Love, Eloise ends up marrying Sir Phillip Crane, who you may remember from the end of season one.

Who does Benedict marry? ›

In the third book, “An Offer From A Gentleman,” Benedict marries Sophie Beckett — the daughter of an Earl who eventually becomes her mother's maid — in a Cinderella-like fairytale romance.

Who did Benedict fall in love with? ›

Benedict meets a mystery woman at a ball and becomes instantly entranced. She sets the standard for Perfect Woman in his life, so much so that he never forgets her, even if he doesn't know her name. Her name, it turns out, is Sophie Beckett, and she is the daughter of of an earl.

Do Sophie and Benedict get married? ›

In Julia Quinn's book series, Benedict Bridgerton marries Sophie Beckett, the daughter of an Earl who ends up working for the Bridgerton family, in Cinderella-like love story that will play out in season four of the Netflix show.

Who gets married in an offer from a gentleman? ›

In Julia Quinn's third book in the “Bridgerton” series, titled “An Offer From A Gentleman,” Cressida eventually marries a nobleman named Lord Twombley (a character not yet introduced in the show).

Is an offer from a gentleman just like Cinderella? ›

The story of Sophie Beckett is somewhat of a Cinderella tale. The illegitimate daughter of an earl, she lives with him as his ward and is schooled alongside her stepsisters, much to her stepmother's dismay. When the earl dies, Sophie is relegated to their maid and is treated very cruelly.

Who does Francesca Bridgerton marry? ›

Unlike her siblings, Francesca actually gets married twice. She first marries a man named John Stirling, who is the Earl of Kilmartin, but he has a tragic, sudden death. Following John's death, Francesca turns to her best friend and husband's cousin, Michael Stirling, who has secretly harbored feelings for her.

Who did Posy Reiling marry? ›

Hugh Woodson

It was love at first sight for both of them. They married shortly after the first meeting.

Who did Hyacinth Bridgerton marry? ›

Clair. Gareth marries Hyacinth Bridgerton. Hyacinth and Gareth have two children together: George and Isabella.

How did Benedict meet Sophie? ›

1815. Benedict attended a masquerade ball thrown by Violet. It was there he first met Sophie Beckett. He didn't know her name, only knowing her as the Lady in Silver, but Benedict fell in love with her immediately.

What happens at the end of the offer? ›

The Offer's finale portrays Ali MacGraw (Meredith Garretson) asking Evans for a divorce but still attending the premiere of The Godfather with him. MacGraw did indeed leave Evans for Steve McQueen, her co-star who she had an affair with on the set of The Getaway.

Does Sophie end up with Benedict? ›

In the third book, “An Offer From A Gentleman,” Benedict marries Sophie Beckett — the daughter of an Earl who eventually becomes her mother's maid — in a Cinderella-like fairytale romance.

Do Penelope and Colin end up together? ›

And Penelope does. By the end of the Season 3 finale, many of Bridgerton's heroes have found happiness — chief among them Penelope. She marries Colin, reveals her secret to the ton without reproach, and saves her family's standing in the aristocracy. We can all call that a win.

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