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The Lady He Lost
The Lady He Lost | Faye Delacour
1 post | 1 read
Her only interest is in making her own way in the world. Luckily, he can help.
Lieutenant Eli Williams was supposed to be dead. In the two years since his shipwreck, his friends and family mourned him, his brother spent his savings, and his fiancée married someone else. So, when he turns up in the middle of the London social season, he quickly becomes the talk of the town. All Eli wants is to set his life back in order and reconnect with Jane Bishop, a friend who has always meant so much more to him, before returning to sea.
Jane refuses to waste any more of her life pining over Eli, who chose her cousin instead of her. She needs to focus on gaining her financial independence by establishing a ladies' gambling club. Never mind that Eli keeps trying to atone for his past mistake by bringing in new members. He's obviously keeping secrets about his disappearance, which means that she can't trust him with her heart even if she did kiss him in a moment of weakness. Or three.
As Eli works to regain her trust, Jane's defensive walls begin to crumble. But when Eli faces a court of inquiry on suspicion of desertion, Jane must decide if she can let go of the past to build a future with Eli, or risk losing him for good.
This charming and sexy friends to enemies to lovers historical romance romp is the perfect read for fans of Evie Dunmore and India Holton.
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Mattsbookaday
The Lady He Lost | Faye Delacour
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The Lady He Lost (Lucky Ladies of London 1), by Faye Delacour (🇨🇦 2024)
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️💫

Premise: Jane has a plan to make her own way in the world, despite the strictures of early Victorian high society, but her plans are complicated when a neighbour returns home, two years after being declared dead.
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Mattsbookaday Review: This is a strong, fun, historical romance, and I enjoyed the earlier Victorian, rather than the more usual Regency, setting. My only real complaint was that the pacing felt a bit slow in the first half of the book, and it probably could have benefited from being fifty pages shorter.

Bookish Pair: For another historical romance set in the world of society gambling, Kelly Bowen‘s Between the Devil and the Duke (2017)
2mo
Reggie I tell myself I hate historical romance and then I read one and I‘m like, oh yeah, they‘re ok. lol 2mo
Mattsbookaday @Reggie Yeah. They‘re so silly in how how-concept they tend to be but when done well they‘re super fun 2mo
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