Cook For Me is a Vintage short that introduces The Perfect Passion Company series by British author, Alexander McCall Smith. It could be called serendipity: just as Katie decides to end an unsatisfactory relationship, quit an equally unsatisfactory job in London and return home to Edinburgh, her second-cousin Inverness Macpherson needs someone reliable to run her business and live in her flat while she takes a much-needed travel break. And if it all works out, Ness might make that a permanent arrangement.
So thirty-year-old Katie takes over The Perfect Passion Company, a bespoke introduction bureau. After her own less-than-successful relationship, Katie isn’t sure she’s qualified to find people their perfect match, but Ness is confident. Katie will have the very capable Dan to look after the accounts, and there’s also William next door, an Australian textile designer, whose advice, Ness claims, is always sound.
Katie’s first client, David Bannatyne is a former pilot whose main criterion for a match is someone who will cook for him. When she has been through all the files and found no likely match, she asks William’s opinion, and his laterally-thought-out idea certainly holds potential. Appealing characters, a cute twist and the prospect of further encounters with this cast promise a delightful new series.
A Laborer In The Vineyard Of Love is the second Vintage short in The Perfect Passion Company series by British author, Alexander McCall Smith. Katie’s latest challenge, at Scotland’s only non-virtual introduction agency, apart from settling for no more than friendship with her talented and attractive-but-engaged business neighbour, William, is to find the right woman for George Fane.
It’s a challenge because George describes his mother as over-possessive, having already seen off one prospective partner, and three of his twin sister’s boyfriends. They both work in the family’s boutique hotel, and Margaret Fane is reputedly manipulative, expert at guilt-tripping her offspring about their responsibilities to the hotel. But when Katie peruses her cousin Ness’s meticulous client records, she finds a woman who might just fit the bill.
Then George’s sister Angela makes a request of the Perfect Passion Company that is tangential to George’s, but may present another solution. More of a surprise is when Margaret Fane comes into the agency with a request of her own.
Meanwhile, Katie’s cousin Ness is settling into her new life in the small Toronto town of Murdoch, getting involved with the local community. “This was a world that was quite different from the one which she had inhabited in Edinburgh. These people lived in a small town, deep in the country, a long distance from the city; Cities were populated by strangers, whereas a small town was full of people whom you recognised, whose personal history you would know or would soon have explained to you, whose faults and failings and dreams and triumphs would be only too familiar to others.” They find out she’s a matchmaker, and flock to her for advice.
This instalment has an estranged father, a nude in a kitchen, a Burns dinner, fishing in small boats, the purchase of an old car, lots of knitting, and several people whose honesty is in question. Katie is satisfied with the unexpected outcome as long as she has contributed to the overall happiness of humanity. Full of gentle philosophy and humour, McCall Smith knows how to entertain.
The Girl From Melbourne is the third short story in The Perfect Passion Company series by British author, Alexander McCall Smith. Clients might be encountered anywhere, and Jenny approaches Katie Donald of the Perfect Passion Company in her favourite Edinburgh deli, having a coffee. When Katie and William interview Jenny at the office, they realise she’s going to be a challenge to match.
Meanwhile, the fact that she must settle for nothing more than friendship with her talented and attractive business neighbour, William Kidd, is emphasised when he reveals that his fiancée, Alice will be visiting from Melbourne. Katie is determined to be friendly and welcoming, but Alice is a surprise: a very unpleasant one.
While William is away on a trade fair weekend, Katie makes a shocking discovery about his fiancée. She wonders why Alice continues to string William along, until she remembers the financial assistance William’s family trust is providing for her. Now, the dilemma is whether to try to protect William from this gold digger by revealing what she knows…
Katie is chuffed to eventually be able to match overly chatty Jenny with a suitable man. Over in Toronto, Ness finds she has two admirers who seem to be competing for her attentions, so some firm diplomacy is required. Her advice to Katie about Alice is sound and, ultimately, William’s innate kindness circumvents a deserved comeuppance, but at least she is permanently off the scene. As usual, there’s plenty of gentle philosophy and humour in everything McCall Smith offers his readers.