I watched PBS's The Making of a Lady and the opening credits said it was based on The Making of a Marchioness. My elderly ears missed some important dialogue at the end, so knowing I had this book as a free Kindle download, I decided to read it to tie up the loose ends. Got to the end and discovered that I had only the first segment of a two-part story and it was just kind of a big nothing that hardly made up 10% of the PBS movie, with all the suspense, plot, and action saved for the next segment. I checked Project Gutenberg and found the rest of it and finished. But, oh, was the second half wordy, wordy, wordy...and rambling...and redundant. The author kept going off on tangents about human nature and her personal theories about men and women that got so garbled that I doubt if the author herself even knew what she trying to say. I must have been feeling masochistic because I read some of the more garbled paragraphs three or four times to see if I could make any sense of of them--nope, should have just skimmed over them. The PBS version changed a lot of the plot and characters and was so different that I never did get my questions answered by reading the book--and except for my disapproval of their making some of the good characters into baddies, I would suggest watching the PBS movie, it was a better story.