I just love this series! Every book has been so much fun to read, and this installment was no different.
The fun of this series is the "fish-out-of-water" aspect of all the characters. The fact that all the poor relations ought to be gentrified "quality" members of society, and would probably have been quietly moldering away in some country pile, but because they have all ended up penniless in a society that believes becoming poor is a sin you are to be punished for, they have been freed - or rather freed themselves - from the ridiculously unreasonable strictures and rules the society of the time dictated. The dichotomy of their knowing what "proper" is and should be, but completely thumbing their noses at it now that they are all - gasp! - "in trade" just makes for some of the most gleefully fun shenanigans ever!
I love all the characters, each with their own back-story and quirks, and each of them contributes something unique and clever to the running of The Poor Relation Hotel which they jointly own. As we've progressed through the series, we have - sort-of spoiler alert, but not really - lost some of the members as they have created new lives for themselves through the people who have visited the hotel.
So in this installment, we find the Relations deciding to help out a young lady whose mother is determined to keep her nearly grown daughter looking and dressing like a young girl so the mother can pretend to be younger than she is to catch a new husband. The Relations cook up a scheme to bring the young lady out and free her from pretending to be a child. Needless to say, all sorts of outlandish situations ensue, translating into tons of entertainment for the reader!
Everything about this series is light, clever, humourous and fun. The books are short and easy to read [Note: if you enjoy audiobooks then I highly recommend getting the audio version of these, as the narrator captures perfectly the tones, the accents and the pretensions of the times which adds an extra layer of enjoyment to the stories!] and they are just perfect for commuting, or to carry around in case you end up having to wait in line unexpectedly somewhere [just don't say I didn't warn you if the others in line give you funny looks when you laugh out loud at the goings-on at The Poor Relation!]
If you like Jane Austen books, but you wish those misses would get some gumption and tell off those dandies occasionally, then The Poor Relations series should be right up your alley. My only complaint is that there are only six books in the series. Highly recommended for light reads.