An amusing but sassy story, back in the witty style of the author from book #1 Safe Harbour, with its inimitable writing. It also has its own epilogue in book #4.5 Crossed Paths.
If one looks at my reviews for book #2, Troubled Waters, and book #3 Homeward Bound, it is obvious that I wasn't particularly enamoured of them. They just lacked the great zingers and laugh-out-loud humour of Safe Harbour.
Book #4 Bright Horizon lifts two more secondary characters into MCs, and although not quite as long as some previous books (something that Troubled Waters and Homeward Bound would have benefited greatly from), it is still long enough to flesh out Ben's and his older partner Elias's characters as they fall in love.
The MCs in book #4.5 Crossed Paths are secondary characters from Bright Horizon, themselves elevated to their own MC status. It too fleshes out the characters of Raj from "the big house" and Antoni, the menial stable hand/handy man/gardener/jack of all trades. This relationship is unheard of, given the huge societal gulf between the two men, in upper-class gentry (long-standing generations of landowning families, but lacking a family title).
In days gone by, having sufficient wealth (earned from farms that they own) to cover the costs of running a large household and the latest fashions for the women of the house, and at least two hundred or more years living in the same manor or mansion, made them acceptable to socialise with the aristocracy. Being involved in trade of any kind (except as a stock broker, the clergy, or Member of Parliament) would mean instant social death.
In book#4, Ben inherits the mansion (big house), fortune, and cider brewery, and being an American, he couldn't care two hoots for the archaic British rules. It is certainly best to read Bright Horizon before Crossed Paths to get the best from both books.