OH MY GOD DO NOT LET THE CUTE ART FOOL YOU AND START READING THIS IN A PUBLIC CAFE THIS IS EROTIC AF THERE ARE BOOBS EVERYWHERE.
Ahem. Not speaking from personal experience.
Anyways, I enjoyed this more than I thought I would. It is cozy and fluffy and, honestly, not that deep. I would have given it 3 stars usually, but it is the cozy season and I am in the mood.
It is a period romance between two housemaids/lady's maids in Edwardian England. Homophobia doesn't exist, and at no point are they in any kind of trouble or conflict or serious challenge. Again, it is the season to enjoy that. Romance itself was quite cute, and both Patience and Esther go on mild self-discovery arcs. What I really liked what the focus on the 'downstairs' of manor setting, and later the interaction with a (queer) London set and the suffragette movement.
(There is one issue I would like to mention though: Esther is Indian (racially as well as from point of origin), something I hadn't realized when I picked up the book. And let's just say my opinion of that depiction is...mixed. First of all, there are some factual errors. Book is set in Edwardian times (1901-1914), Esther is clearly from Colonial India with a very specific period-accurate background, Suffragettes are doing their thing...and somehow Partition of India (1947) has already occurred?? There are also some flattening of Indian cultures in a way that does show good research but also, unfortunately, gives away quite easily that the author is not Indian herself. There are a few nods and winks to racism and imperialism - some of which I found quite funny tbh - but it is always stopped from actually affecting the plot, similar to how the book treats homophobia.
It is a wishful depiction, but it is not quite clear what the underlying wish is. That colonialism never happened? That it did, but does not impact individual lives and relationship beyond a certain extent? That the life of a white/Scottish lesbian would not be very different from an Indian lesbian in Imperial England? I mean, sure, why not.
Honestly, his would have been a more serious problem in a more serious book. But this one, in the end, is just not that deep. It is fun, and it is sweet and it is cozy. And I think that is enough.)