sweet, at times humorous, romance about an earl recovering from a debilitating war injury and an almost engagement whose household staff keep falling in love and running off. To fill the vacancy after his secretary runs off with a maid, Benjamin Sinclaire hires J Quincy, who is great at organization and delightfully impertinant...and also a woman in disguise. Jo (Josephine) needs to support a younger sister and a grandmother after her father's death left them penniless, so she continues the ruse started years ago to make sure she can gain employment as a secretary: dress and behave like a young man.
Quincy (as she's called pretty much throughout) doesn't seem to be too good at the deception, though she had apparently been doing this for years. From within minutes to a day, most people around her know she's female. Sinclaire figures it out thanks to her trousers and feminine-shaped ass within a day of employment. But he decides to keep her around so she can continue to investigate the possibility that his former secretary was embezzling. What follows are weeks of farce, growing friendship, and a rapidly dwindling staff as they all start pairing up and running off. Finally, the (unintentional) matchmaking earl has found someone to match with himself.
I read a wide range of romance and this falls on the sweet end. The book, though there is some kissing and touching (not really much), is much more about the relationship between Sinclaire and Quincy. They are likable people who become engaged in a companiable relationship, fall in love, not in lust. The main drawback is that it's all just this side of unrealistic and unlikely. A healthy suspension of disbelief is necessary to go through the male disguise and farce therein. If you enjoy your romance novels more cute than hot, this is a good one.
Grade: B-