The Agatha Award winner debuts a 1930s London mystery series, featuring a penniless twenty-something member of the extended royal family.
Her ridiculously long name is Lady Victoria Georgiana Charlotte Eugenie, daughter to the Duke of Atholt and Rannoch. And she is flat broke. As the thirty-fourth in line for the throne, she has been taught only a few things, among them, the perfect curtsey. But when her brother cuts off her allowance, she leaves Scotland, and her fiancŽ Fish-Face, for London, where she has:
a) worked behind a cosmetics counter-and gotten sacked after five hours
b) started to fall for a quite unsuitable minor royal
c) made some money housekeeping (incognita, of course), and
d) been summoned by the Queen to spy on her playboy son.
Then an arrogant Frenchman, who wants her family’s 800-year-old estate for himself, winds up dead in her bathtub. Now her most important job is to clear her very long family name.
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Sexual Content - 1/5
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Violence - 1/5
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Language - /5
/5
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Drugs and Alcohol - /5
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Summary
Overall Rhys Bowen, author of the wonderful Constable Evans mysteries, starts off another delightful series with Lady Victoria Georgiana Charlotte Eugenie, 34th in line or the British throne. The action is fast, the characters fun and deftly drawn, and the mystery challenging.
Violence There is a murder and a little bit of danger, but no descriptions of violence.
Sexual A kiss and a little decorous discussion of character's romantic entanglements, nothing more.