This is a sequel to "Penny Plain". Lady Bidsborough, formerly Jean Jardine of The Rigs in Priorsford, is now the mistress of Mintern Abbas, a stately home in England. She is also the mother of three children. When her husband, Biddy, feels a moral obligation to accompany the friend who saved his life during WWI on a long trip, Jean decides to spend the winter in her beloved Priorsford. With a menagerie of children, pets, maids and a secretary, she returns to The Rigs. As usual in O. Douglas' novels, nothing much happens except a continuous round of visits, tea parties, dinners, lunches. We meet the characters from "Penny Plain", now 10 years older, as well as some characters from "Pink Sugar". Jean and her secretary spend quite a bit of time on charity work, and there is an amateur theatre club, presided over a snobby tartar, whose only daughter just can't seem to land a husband. Jean's sister-in-law and brother-in-law, Pamela and Lewis, are close neighbors and flit in and out of the story. In the end, some tension develops when Jean's oldest son develops a dangerous infection and a cable arrives that Biddy was involved in a car accident in Australia. But of course everything is fine in the end.
These books are cozy reads, not demanding at all, but warm and comfortable.