Caution!! Contains spoilers!
Although many novels have been hyped as “perfect for fans of Downton Abbey,” the recommendation in this case is justified. It would be helpful at first to have a score card, for there are a wealth of point-of-view characters above and below stairs, as well as others in the village and in London. The story skips via short chapters from viewpoint to viewpoint, beginning with new sewing maid Dory coming to take up her duties at the Castle and her interaction with the housekeeper and the unpleasant, in-it-for-himself James, a stand-in for Downton’s Barrow. We proceed to a groom’s reflections, on to those of the current earl’s delight in hunting, a brief introspection since he dies in a hunting fall immediately after. We then pass along to the eldest son Giles, recalled from an archeological dig in Egypt to reluctantly take up his duties as heir. The reader becomes acquainted in turn with schoolgirl friends indigent Nina and shy heiress Kitty, whose mother intends to trade her vast dowry for the highest title she can get. Since Giles’s estate is near bankrupt, the stage is set for a marriage of convenience. The large cast of characters is difficult at first to manage, but one gradually sorts them out—the wise, French-quoting Grandmere, feckless former soldier and younger son Richard, the mostly-ignored younger sisters Rachael and Alice, elderly former earl’s valet Crook, the dislikable James…. The author succeeds very well in making each of their stories compelling, and though as a purist I find point-of-view shifts even within paragraphs irritating, I became invested enough each of their stories to overlook that. Other reviewers have rightly complained that the book ends abruptly, Nina newly married to Mr. Coleman, the doting older husband she likes but doesn’t love, Kitty and Giles growing closer with the coming birth of their first child. The numerous story threads are left unresolved, to be continued in the sequels. If this will annoy you, better pass on this story, but for those who love the rich, upstairs-downstairs, every-point-of-view-revealed-except-the-dogs tapestry, there will be no choice but to proceed to the next. This reader will!