Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Love Remedy
The Love Remedy | Elizabeth Everett
2 posts | 2 read | 1 reading | 1 to read
“Beautiful and important.”—New York Times bestselling author Julia Quinn When a Victorian apothecary hires a stoic private investigator to protect her business, they learn there’s only one way to treat true love—with a happily ever after. When Lucinda Peterson’s recently perfected formula for a salve to treat croup goes missing, she’s certain it’s only the latest in a line of misfortunes at the hands of a rival apothecary. Outraged and fearing financial ruin, Lucy turns to private investigator Jonathan Thorne for help. She just didn’t expect her champion to be so . . . grumpy? A single father and an agent at Tierney & Co., Thorne accepts missions for a wide variety of employers—from the British government to wronged wives. None have intrigued him so much as the spirited Miss Peterson. As the two work side by side to unmask her scientific saboteur, Lucy slips ever so sweetly under Thorne’s battered armor, tempting him to abandon old promises. With no shortage of suspects—from a hostile political group to an erstwhile suitor—Thorne’s investigation becomes a threat to all that Lucy holds dear. As the truth unravels around them the cure to their problems is clear: they must face the future together.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Laughterhp
The Love Remedy | Elizabeth Everett
post image
Pickpick

So I didn‘t realize this was a spin off story/series from the Secret Scientists of London series (which i didn‘t finish).

There is reference to things from that series, but I don‘t think it matters if you haven‘t read it.

This is about a female apothecary who gets her formula stolen so she‘s hires a PI to get it back. He‘s a single father and has some pretty strong beliefs that cause friction. But it is a romance, so you can guess what happens

review
MaggieCarr
The Love Remedy | Elizabeth Everett
post image
Mehso-so

This one was way more explicit than I expected it to be for a book set in the 1800s. I will admit to being reminded that we, as women, have less autonomy over our bodies now (in many states) than we did 200 years ago.