Thanks to NetGalley for a copy of this ebook and this is my freely given opinion.
Charlie Lane writes with a lightness and humour that makes reading her stories so fun and enjoyable. I loved the banter and dialogue, and the fun characters. Lady Pratsby was such a fun side character with some great lines that made me laugh. This is a fun historical romance with some grumpy-sunshine, differing social status themes, and a hero/heroine somewhat different from the norm.
The story starts over a decade prior when Raph Bromley was the young Viscount, heir to the Marquess of Waneborough, and Matilda Bellvue was the nineteen year oldgoverness in their home, to his young sister. She had recently come to their household after being tossed out by her half brother, after the failure of her father to arrange for the security of her own future, upon his death.
The Waneborough's are rather Bohemian in their lifestyles, and Raph is a young man developing a sense of responsibility to the estate, and frustrated by his father's lassaiz faire attitude to management. The Marquess would rather focus on art and fostering artistic endeavours, leaving the management of monies and the estate to his steward. Imagine Raph's shock when he finds the steward leaving their employ with the blunt statement that they have no monies. Raph is forced to make decisions for the family, including to fire Matilda. But he promises to do what he can to help her.
Raph keeps his promise and Matilda is set up with other employment opportunities over the years, as a governess or companion. In the present day, of the 1820s, Matilda, now in her 30s, is the companion to Lady Pratsby, a widowed Viscountess. She intends for this to be her last post, as she has inherited a cottage in Cumbria and small annuity, enough for her to retire there and be her own mistress.
But Raph, now the new Marquess, and having to manage an impoverished estate and his family, seeks her out to be a companion to his own recently widowed mother, to help her in her deep mourning. His father has set out a will for his children challenging them to engage in artistic expression to gain their inheritance. The shame is that none of them have the same artistic nature of their father and Raph still has estates, family, and tenants to care for. He wants Matilda to deal with his emotionally distressed mother through her mourning period, while he focuses on trying to gain his inheritance, and perhaps court a wealthy heiress to refill the coffers.
But what he really wants, and has wanted since he was younger, was Matilda.
Talk about slow burn! It took them 15 years!
This is a story that is chock full of interesting characters and dialogue. The secondary characters are quite bright points for me, acting as comedic foils - Lady Pratsby, Tobias, the brother in law to the Bromleys. There is good dialogue with lots of humour, and even the dead are interesting - what the heck was with that convoluted will of the old Marquess and how the heck did the artsy couple have children and not impart their appreciation of art onto them?? Then for the Marquess to leave them in such a bind - and one with a twist in the end. The parents sound kooky but loveable - but definitely frustratingly kooky!
4.5 stars out of 5 for being different, with interesting, humorous dialogue and characters.