This one is tedious in the extreme. My goodness. Read this book if you're invested in the series and like to finish things; otherwise, skip it.
I'm so irritated, I'm having a hard time getting my thoughts together in an orderly way, you have been warned. Trying hard to remember that this is not supposed to be high class literature. Don't expect perfection. Don't expect perfection. Don't expect perfection. (spoken like a mantra)
From the first book in this series, there have been issues. In every single book, much of the plot hinges on one or more completely illogical mental leaps on Daisy's part. She comes to conclusions that stand for no reason other than that they must stand for the story to conclude the way the author intends. Another thing that has bothered me more with each successive book is Alec's overbearing nature and tendency to jealousy while eventually letting Daisy simply run roughshod all over him. I'm pretty sure the reality of that marriage wouldn't really be pleasant. In spite of those things, I carried on because the stories were entertaining and the characters, for the most part, engaging, if a bit mentally deficient.
And then, this book. This author with this series and America? Absolutely didn't work at all. Daisy comes across as posh in the extreme (but don't forget she really doesn't want to have that "honorary" in front of her name, that's just bad luck on her part- yet somehow, it feels like she's very much sure that her class of people is, in fact, better. The only people in the entire book who are portrayed in a positive light are Alec (as much a bumbling policeman as any, only his wife worships him and the author says he's smart), Daisy (an airhead, let's face it) and that other (posh) British pilot they so conveniently meet at the airfield in NY.... and the poor beleaguered black female pilot who has a personality like an angel and just takes it all like a martyr. I don't know enough about Bessie Coleman to know whether or not she's been portrayed accurately or not but she doesn't exactly fit into the story that well. (Stop here to look on in wide eyed amazement as, with zero training, in the middle of her first air travel experience, Daisy actually successfully co-pilots a plane across the continent. gigantic eye-roll) (Of course, we do have the poor put-upon Irish immigrants forced to work menial jobs in a hotel who are "good guys" but definitely not actually on Daisy's level- I got the feeling they were in their proper place- good enough to work in the hotel but not to be on Daisy's level socially.) Somehow, despite Daisy's so-called liberation, I get the feeling in this book that the way things should be are the British class way.
The author apparently left England and chose (we can assume it wasn't against her will) to live in the US- is she happy there? She sure doesn't write about the US as if it's any fit place to live.
PG Wodehouse wrote about the same class of British people- both in the US and in the UK- but he did it with wit and style. This series is getting old; this book left me irritated and wondering if I want to see the series through to the end.
As other reviewers have mentioned, the narrator for the audiobook definitely also became wearisome.