Her Royal Spyness by Rhys Bowen - (Audible version) - Normally I don't have much use for audiobooks, but this title was the one I chose for a preview of the Audible membership for Kindle. And it was delightful, I must say! The narrator, Katherine Kellgren, does a lovely job with the different voices and accents, and really added to my enjoyment of the book. This is the first book by Rhys Bowen that I've 'read' but I think I will follow up on the further adventures of the heroine of this series, Lady Georgiana aka Georgie. The only thing I found difficult about the Audible version was that I couldn't see the text at all, which I would have liked especially when it came to the names of the different characters.
Georgie is a very distant relation of the royal family of Great Britain, and when she finds that there are plans to marry her off to some objectionable foreign prince, she decides she would rather live as an "ordinary person" in London. Never mind that her brother has cut off her allowance so she is practically penniless, and that she has no idea how to fend for herself. It takes all her ingenuity to figure out how to light a fire and make a simple meal for herself. Finding a job proves a challenge because of her title and status, and her lack of any kind of experience. She has quite the adventures during her first days in London - acquiring and losing her first job, learning how to manage without servants, and crashing parties and weddings. The first signs of the cozy mystery come when her older brother comes to London and reveals that their father had apparently lost the deed to the family estate through gambling and that an unsavory Frenchman has come to collect his winnings. Things get much worse when Georgie arrives back at the London townhouse one afternoon and discovers the Frenchman drowned in the bath! Her brother Binky is the chief suspect and Georgie takes it upon herself to discover who the murderer really is.
Although the mystery itself doesn't appear until at least halfway through the book, the entire story is full of the scrapes that Georgie gets herself into (she tends to be rather clumsy), and her droll and often self-deprecating observations of her own situation and those of her friends and family. (The story is told in first person, with Georgie as narrator) I find it harder to assess the mystery itself when only listening, and unable to flip back pages myself, but I picked up on several little clues along the way and it certainly seemed to be well-crafted. The characters are delightfully eccentric and Georgie herself is so likable that I am hoping to be able to read more in this series.
(Book #8 in the 52 Books in 52 Weeks Challenge)
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