Adrian Savage: A Novel by Lucas Malet

(8 User reviews)   2255
By Oliver Peterson Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Chamber Two
Malet, Lucas, 1852-1931 Malet, Lucas, 1852-1931
English
Okay, so picture this: it's Victorian England, but the main character is a man who's basically allergic to the whole 'stiff upper lip' thing. That's Adrian Savage. He's a poet, he feels things deeply, and he's just inherited a country estate he never wanted. The real story kicks off when he gets tangled up with two very different women. One is the beautiful, charming, and maybe a little too perfect Juliet. The other is the brilliant, sharp, and fiercely independent Mary. Adrian's caught between what society expects of him and what his heart actually wants. It's a quiet, slow-burn drama about a guy trying to figure out if he can be true to his artistic, emotional self in a world that values money, land, and good manners above all else. If you like character studies where the biggest battles happen in drawing rooms and inside someone's head, you'll get hooked.
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I picked up Adrian Savage expecting a standard Victorian drama, but Lucas Malet (the pen name for Mary St. Leger Kingsley) gives us something quieter and more thoughtful. Forget carriages racing to Gretna Green; the tension here is all internal.

The Story

Adrian Savage is a sensitive poet who unexpectedly becomes the heir to a substantial estate. He's thrown from his bohemian life into the heart of the English gentry, a world obsessed with property and propriety. The central conflict unfolds through his relationships. He's drawn to Juliet, who embodies the ideal Victorian lady—graceful, agreeable, and socially impeccable. But he's also intellectually and emotionally sparked by Mary, a woman of formidable intelligence and unflinching honesty who challenges his every assumption. The book follows Adrian as he navigates this impossible choice, which is really a choice between two versions of himself: the comfortable life society has laid out, or a truer, messier path shaped by genuine connection.

Why You Should Read It

What surprised me was how modern Adrian's struggle feels. It's not about love triangles in a soapy way; it's about authenticity. Malet writes with incredible psychological insight. You feel Adrian's quiet desperation as he weighs every decision. The women, especially Mary, are far more than plot devices—they're fully realized characters with their own ambitions and frustrations in a restrictive society. The prose is beautiful without being flowery, and it perfectly captures the weight of those long, significant glances across a parlor room. It’s a slow, character-driven burn, but if you let yourself sink into it, the emotional payoff is huge.

Final Verdict

This isn't a book for someone craving fast-paced action. It’s perfect for readers who love classic authors like George Eliot or Henry James—stories where the drama is subtle and the characters' inner lives are the real landscape. If you enjoy historical fiction that explores the pressure to conform versus the need to be yourself, Adrian Savage is a hidden gem. It’s a thoughtful, beautifully written novel about the quiet courage it takes to choose your own path.



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Jessica Rodriguez
1 year ago

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2 years ago

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1 year ago

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1 year ago

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David Sanchez
1 year ago

Surprisingly enough, it provides a comprehensive overview perfect for everyone. Highly recommended.

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