![]() ![]() ![]() Unfortunately however, coming from rural Northumberland makes an entrée into the right circles in London rather difficult as they know no one who can introduce them. Robert Selby and his sister Louisa have come to London with the object of securing an advantageous match for Louisa. (I’m using ‘she’ and ‘her’ in this review, even though Charity is non-binary the author uses those pronouns throughout the book for reasons she explains in her author’s note, so I’m going to follow her lead). The two protagonists are a man and a woman – but the fact that this isn’t a standard m/f romance quickly becomes apparent when we learn that our heroine – a former housemaid named Charity Church – has actually been living as a man for the past six years and feels far more ‘right’ in herself dressing, acting and living as a man than she ever did as a woman. Unmasked by the Marquess, the first in Cat Sebastian’s new Regency Imposters series, marks something of a departure for her in that, unlike her previous books, it isn’t a male/male romance. ![]()
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