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*A Publishers Weekly Pick of the Week!* In Allison Montclair's A
Rogue's Company, business becomes personal for the Right Sort
Marriage Bureau when a new client, a brutal murder, two
kidnappings, and the recently returned from Africa Lord Bainbridge
threatens everything that one of the principals holds dear. In
London, 1946, the Right Sort Marriage Bureau is getting on its feet
and expanding. Miss Iris Sparks and Mrs. Gwendolyn Bainbridge are
making a go of it. That is until Lord Bainbridge--the widowed
Gwen's father-in-law and legal guardian--returns from a business
trip to Africa and threatens to undo everything important to her,
even sending her six-year-old son away to a boarding school. But
there's more going on than that. A new client shows up at the
agency, one whom Sparks and Bainbridge begin to suspect really has
a secret agenda, somehow involving the Bainbridge family. A murder
and a subsequent kidnapping sends Sparks to seek help from a
dangerous quarter--and now their very survival is at stake.
In Allison Montclair's The Lady from Burma, murder once again
stalks the proprietors of The Right Sort Marriage Bureau in the
surprisingly dangerous landscape of post-World War II London... In
the immediate post-war days of London, two unlikely partners have
undertaken an even more unlikely, if necessary, business venture -
The Right Sort Marriage Bureau. The two partners are Miss Iris
Sparks, a woman with a dangerous - and never discussed - past in
British intelligence and Mrs. Gwendolyn Bainbridge, a war widow
with a young son entangled in a complicated aristocratic family.
Mostly their clients are people trying to start (or restart) their
lives in this much-changed world, but their new client is something
different. A happily married woman has come to them to find a new
wife for her husband. Dying of cancer, she wants the two to make
sure her entomologist, academic husband finds someone new once she
passes. Shortly thereafter, she's found dead in Epping Forest, in
what appears to be a suicide. But that doesn't make sense to either
Sparks or Bainbridge. At the same time, Bainbridge is attempting to
regain legal control of her life, opposed by the conservator who
has been managing her assets - perhaps not always in her best
interest. When that conservator is found dead, Bainbridge herself
is one of the prime suspects. Attempting to make sense of two
deaths at once, to protect themselves and their clients, the
redoubtable owners of the Right Sort Marriage Bureau are once again
on the case.
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