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Thursday, March 14, 2024

No Life For A Lady by Hannah Dolby (Paperback Release)

 

No Life for a Lady by Hannah Dolby.

Published in paperback 14th March 2024 by Aria.

From the cover of the book:

Violet Hamilton is a woman who knows her own mind. Which, in Victorian Hastings, can make things a little complicated...

At 28, Violet's father is beginning to worry she will never find a husband. But every suitor he presents, Violet finds a new and inventive means of rebuffing.

Because Violet does not want to marry. She wants to work, and make her own way in the world. But more than anything, she wants to find her mother Lily, who disappeared from Hastings Pier 10 years earlier.

Finding the missing is no job for a lady, but when Violet hires a seaside detective to help, she sets off a chain of events that will put more than just her reputation at risk.

Can Violet solve the mystery of Lily Hamilton's vanishing before it's too late?

A delightfully joyful, funny and gripping historical novel, perfect for fans of The Lady's Guide to Fortune Hunting and The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels.

***********

BLIND DATE WITH A BOOK:

- Misbehaving ladies!
- Historical mysteries!
- Quirky seaside setting!
- Gentlemen who hide behind wild beards!

Welcome to
No Life for a Lady
By Hannah Dolby


Hastings, 1898. Twenty-eight-year-old Violet Hamilton is a young woman ahead of her time. Although sheltered and naive, in many respects Violet has been forced to grow-up quickly by having to take on the role as housekeeper to her father after the mysterious disappearance of her mother nearly ten years ago, and it is a job she she ill-suited to. Violet longs to be free to decide her own future, and be rid of the string of increasingly unsuitable suitors her frustrated father keeps presenting her with, but the options available to a respectable young woman are limited and they have little appeal to someone as independent-minded as she is.

However, before she can really get on with the business of deciding how to spend her life, she needs to discover what happened to her mother. Not knowing where to start, she secretly hires a private detective, only to find that the dubious Mr Knight has some very unsavoury ideas about the mystery, and is not too concerned about destroying her and her mother's reputations in pursuit of a perverse agenda of his own. This state of affairs cannot be allowed to continue...

Violet decides to try her luck at being a lady detective to see if she can locate her mother before Mr Knight, with the reluctant help of the handsome furniture seller Mr Blackthorn (also a former private detective). This unexpectedly takes her on a voyage of discovery about life for a woman in late Victorian society. Can Violet become mistress of her own fate, and solve the mystery of her missing mother before matters get out of hand?

No Life for a Lady is an absolute joy of a late Victorian caper, set within the quiet streets of Hastings. Violet has all the makings of a heroine right from the start, if only she can acquire the means to escape the determination of her boorish father to get her married off.  When she decides to get to the truth about her mother's disappearance, she sets in motion a bizarre series of events that lead her into danger, and help her get to grips with relationships, sexual attraction and the mysteries of the marital bed. She finds out some uncomfortable things about her mother, and the state of her parents' marriage in the process.

This is a light and easily consumed read, packed with humorous moments that have you laughing out loud, but its genius lies is the clever way it also touches on so many intriguing themes about the lives of  Victorian women. The expectation that respectable young ladies should confine their interests to becoming dutiful wives, with all that entails, is central to the story, and there are many laughs to be had at Violet's expense in the delicious scenes Dolby contrives. The double standards between the sexual freedoms enjoyed by men and women is explored beautifully, with a foray into the hidden sex trade in outwardly respectable Hastings, and Dolby brings in many aspects of sexuality and desire too.

I thoroughly enjoyed how Dolby uses the historical setting of this story to bust open some of the myths about sex in the Victorian world, and the characters are an absolute delight - particularly the women, who are the focus throughout. The mystery of Violet's mother's disappearance allows Dolby to bring in a few dastardly cads to boo and hiss at, and the melodramatic ending has you punching the air with glee. There is a quirky romantic thread for Violet too, that is pretty darned heart-warming. I loved it and cannot wait for the follow-up, How to Solve Murders Like a Lady, which is out on 6th June 2024!

No Life for a Lady is out now in hardcover, paperback, ebook and audio formats.

Thank you to Head of Zeus for sending me a copy of this book as part of their 'Blind Date With A Book' feature, in return for an honest review.

About the author:

Hannah Dolby's first job was in the circus and she is keen to keep life as interesting. She trained as a journalist in Hastings and has worked in PR for many years, promoting museums, galleries, palaces, gardens and even Dolly the sheep. She completed the Curtis Brown selective three-month novel writing course, and she won runner-up in the Comedy Women in Print Awards for this novel with the prize of a place on an MA in Comedy Writing at the University of Falmouth. She currently lives in London.




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