I have been following this series since the first book "A Useful Woman" (click here), and the second book "A Purely Private Affair" (click here). The third book released and I am finally getting around to my review of it.
Author: Darcie Wilde
Copyright: Dec 2019 (Kensingon) 352 pgs
Series: 3rd in Rosalind Thorne Mystery series
Sensuality: Mild
Mystery Sub-genre: Historical Cozy Mystery
Main Character: Rosalind Thorne, former heiress now on the outskirts of society
Setting: Early 1800s (Regency,) London
Obtained Through: Publisher via Netgalley for honest review
Cover Blurb: "When the ladies of the ton of Regency London need discreet assistance,
they turn to Rosalind Thorne--in these mysteries inspired by the novels
of Jane Austen.
Trust is a delicate thing, and no one knows
that better than Rosalind Thorne. Lady Melbourne has entrusted her with
recovering a packet of highly sensitive private letters stolen from her
desk. The contents of these letters hold great interest for the famous
poet Lord Byron, who had carried on a notorious public affair with Lady
Melbourne's daughter-in-law, the inconveniently unstable Lady Caroline
Lamb. Rosalind is to take up residence in Melbourne House, posing as
Lady Melbourne's confidential secretary. There, she must discover the
thief and regain possession of the letters before any further scandal
erupts.
However, Lady Melbourne omits a crucial detail. Rosalind
learns from the Bow Street runner Adam Harkness that an unidentified
woman was found dead in the courtyard of Melbourne House. The coroner
has determined that she was poisoned. Adam urges Rosalind to use her new
position in the household to help solve the murder. As she begins to
untangle a web of secrets and blackmail, Rosalind finds she must risk
her own life to bring this desperate business to an end..."
Rosalind still reminds me of a proper British version of True Grit's Mattie Ross. The Bow Street runner, Adam Harkness, is smart and surprisingly compassionate. Lady Melbourne's family are all unique characters and raise suspicions. Alice and George Littlefield are the break out characters. They are dear friends of Rose's who lost their fortunes but took to newspaper employment to make their way in life and stay close to Rose. Then their is Devin Winterbourne, a Duke, and early suitor of Rose's from before her family became destitute. He is an interesting character and I have warmed to him over the course of the three books.
The plot was interesting with the "naughty letters" from Lord Byron that could cause destruction of reputations and a marriage, then the murder added in made this a tantalizing story. Plus the growing relationship between Rosalind and Harkness with Devin Winterbourne, the Duke of Casselmain, renewing his offer of marriage from years before makes the story fly by.
The setting of London is always expertly painted by Ms. Wilde and transports the reader. The climax provides some delicious tense moments that I enjoyed and the wrap-up had me wanting the next book immediately.
This series was inspired by the Jane Austen novels and that is can be
seen on every page. I find the "cop boyfriend" very cliche, but the author raises class tensions between Rose and Harkness as well as
high society's fanatical avoidance of even a hint of scandal, so being chummy
with a cop is out-of-the-question and introduces a forbidden element to
their attraction. It becomes harder in this book for Rosalind (Rose) to deny she has developed some feelings for Harkness. This has become one of my "go to" historical mystery series and has never failed to entertain me.
Rating: Near Perfect - Buy two copies: one for you and one for a friend.