I’m tempted to say that every so often a pearl can be found amongst the dross of the over-crowded HR genre - but I can’t mention “pearl” without wanting to laugh uproariously about one component of No Life for a Lady - the comedic theme throughout the book - the twists and turns as Violet tries to discover the how, why and what of sex.
Some might find this aspect of the story unbelievable, but I certainly don’t. I’m old enough to remember when young women were deliberately terrified by stories of pain and misery (in order to protect their “purity”) and were then forced to search for older girls who might be prepared to share detail about what would actually happen. (No Internet in those days.)
Searching is what Violet does throughout the story - and not just about sex.
Violet is primarily searching for her mother, who disappeared 10 years previously, and who she fears may be dead - although she has a disquieting certainty that she is alive and may have instead escaped to a happier life.
Violet is also searching for her own identity, independence and even for a paid job. She is rejected as a writer, but then decides to become a Lady Typist (almost respectable for the daughter of a banker in a small English town in the Victorian era) or, even more adventurously, a Lady Detective.
Finally, Violet is trying to decide if her decade-long determination to remain a spinster has been more fuelled by fear than her inability to fall in love. Shortly before she disappeared, Violet’s mother shared gruesome, bloody and pain-filled images of “marital intimacy”. As she tries to decide if her mother’s horrific story is accurate, Violet has many amusing adventures. Her internal judgements and musings are even more amusing.
As part of her adventures she meets Benjamin (thankfully, a seller of furniture and kindly retired detective, rather than a dissolute aristocrat) and begins to feel desire for him, so even though her searching for truth is generally hilarious, there is also a serious (and even romantic) element to her gradual enlightenment. (Be prepared, however, to be entertained by images of turkeys and mushrooms, amongst other cleverly constructed comedic scenes).
It’s not all laughs. There is also a serious side to Violet’s growing disenchantment with people she has trusted, as there is with her increased self-confidence and ability to make tough decisions.
Violet is thoroughly likeable. So is Benjamin. Their romance is gentle and charming.
No Life for a Lady is surely the beginning of a series. If so, I will be ordering the second instalment, as soon as that is possible - because this HR is not only refreshingly different from most of the HRs that I’ve recently read (and discarded before finishing) it is well written and insightful. It’s also very, very funny, which I appreciated enormously. In this sad, sad world this author has done her readers a good, good deal.
The laughs take it from 4 to 5 stars.