Booklist Reviews
*Starred Review* Currently enduring her first London season, Beth Demeroven has approximately four months to make a good match. Gwen Bertram is in the midst of her fourth London season with no plans whatsoever to find a suitable matrimonial mate. After Gwen helps Beth successfully navigate her first ball, a friendship blossoms between them. Gwen and Beth find themselves spending even more time together once they discover that Gwen's father and Beth's mother had shared a 20-year romantic tendresse. Bringing the constantly bickering couple back together now becomes Gwen and Beth's new goal, but that project takes an unexpected turn when Gwen and Beth discover their feelings of friendship have deepened into something different and romantic. With an engaging plot that offers a deft nod to The Parent Trap, Alban's gracefully written and keenly witty romance debut perfectly encapsulates all the hunger, heartbreak, and hope involved in falling in love for the first time. The start to the Mischief & Matchmaking series is an absolute delight. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
Library Journal Reviews
DEBUT Two young women in Victorian London distract themselves from the marriage market by setting up their parents, with unexpected results. Miss Beth Demeroven must land a fiancé by the end of her first and only season, or she and her widowed mother will be without house or fortune. Despite the dire consequences hanging over her, Beth finds her new friendship with the dashing and high-spirited Gwen Havenfort far more interesting than hunting for a man. When Gwen suggests they try to use their time to set up her widower father with Beth's mother and keeping themselves single for another year, Beth is only too happy to scheme with her. Their friendship starts to become something more, but a marriage proposal for Beth threatens to destroy all their hopes for a future together.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
Alban debuts with an unabashedly fluffy sapphic romance set in 1850s London. Beth Demeroven's newly widowed mother is anxious for her to find a successful match during her first season in society and save them from "dying in a hovel." The available men are tedious, but Beth finds a friend in Lady Gwen Bertram. Despite it being Gwen's fourth season without an engagement, her doting widowed father, the charming Lord Havenfort, puts no pressure on her, as he's more interested in engaging her in fencing, chess, and political maneuvers to get the Matrimonial Causes Act, granting wives greater freedom to divorce their husbands, passed. Gwen and Beth discover that their parents were once involved and scheme to rekindle their old romance. If they marry, after all, it would save Beth from having to do so herself. As their matchmaking plays out, the women develop unexpected feelings for each other, realizing they want to be more than just friends. The people around them are encouraging about their connection despite the social mores of the time, and difficult topics like insolvency and spousal abuse show up as plot devices without real emotional resonance, keeping the tone light. For readers who want tenderness, not trauma, in their queer period fiction, this will hit the spot.