Is The Devil Comes Courting Worth Reading And Who Are Its Characters?

2026-03-13 17:58:28 63
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4 Answers

Declan
Declan
2026-03-16 10:37:30
Okay, quick enthusiasm: I adored the parts where the book actually explains how Amelia’s code works (in an accessible, not-nerdy-exclusionary way), and that technical angle kept me riveted even when the pair were oceans apart. The novel is firmly in historical romance but flirts with broader social critique; Grayson Hunter is not a typical aristocratic love interest — his project to lay a transpacific telegraph cable drives much of the action — and Amelia Smith’s background as a Chinese woman raised by English missionaries makes her mistrust and quiet resilience deeply compelling. The Worth Saga context matters a little (this is generally listed as book three), but you don’t need to have read everything to appreciate the story. Secondary players show up to enrich the world — you’ll meet members of the Worth family and younger characters who get meaningful arcs — and the pacing uses time jumps and separation to build tension. For me, the emotional center and the unusual premise combined to make it more than a comfort read; it felt purposeful and layered. If you value character-driven romance that doesn’t shy away from historical unfairness, I recommend it.
Bradley
Bradley
2026-03-16 15:06:59
If you like your historical romance with heart, brains, and a brainy plot twist, I’d say give 'The Devil Comes Courting' a shot — I loved how it surprised me. The book is by Courtney Milan and was published in April 2021; it’s the third full-length entry in her Worth Saga and can be enjoyed as a standalone, though it threads into the series lightly. The core hook is delightfully odd in the best way: Captain Grayson Hunter, an ambitious Black cable-laying captain, needs someone who can invent a workable telegraphic code for Chinese characters, and the person he finds is Amelia Smith, a Chinese woman raised by English missionaries who isn’t looking for a job but is devastatingly brilliant. That setup leads to lots of letters, telegrams, and soft-burn attraction as the two try to bridge literal and cultural distances. I’m a sucker for romances that tackle real history rather than papering it over, and this one doesn’t shy away from colonialism, racism, grief, and family wounds while still delivering warm, character-first moments. The book leans into both the emotional payoff between Grayson and Amelia and the intellectual thrill of Amelia’s inventions and Grayson’s mission, so if you enjoy layered heroes and heroines who rebuild themselves alongside each other, this is worth your time. My final thought: it’s quietly moving and unexpectedly clever — I closed it feeling satisfied and teary in the best way.
Olivia
Olivia
2026-03-18 16:30:10
Reading 'The Devil Comes Courting' felt like discovering a clever, slightly unusual romance that respects the reader’s intelligence; I kept turning pages because the characters are stubbornly real. The protagonists are Captain Grayson Hunter, who’s driven to connect the world with telegraphic lines, and Amelia Smith, the reclusive genius who figures out how to transmit Chinese characters by wire. Their relationship grows over distance, letters, and professional collaboration, which gives the novel a slow-build charm and emotional grounding. The author tackles big themes — race, colonial power dynamics, and emotional abuse in families — without flattening the romance; those issues are part of the story, not an afterthought. I also appreciated how Milan uses the telegraph project as more than window dressing: it shapes both plot and character development, making the stakes feel real. If you want a historical romance that makes you think while still delivering chemistry, this one’s a solid pick.
Jade
Jade
2026-03-19 19:45:21
Short take from a picky reader: I think 'The Devil Comes Courting' is worth reading if you want a historical romance that balances intellect and feeling. The two main characters — Captain Grayson Hunter and Amelia Smith — anchor the story: he’s ambitious and principled, she’s brilliant and quietly wounded, and their work on a telegraph code gives the book an original backbone. The novel also handles difficult themes like racism and colonialism alongside the romance, so it’s not purely escapist; it asks you to care about real harms while still rewarding you with tenderness. I walked away impressed by Milan’s ability to mix technical fascination with emotional honesty, so if that combo appeals, give it a try.
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