A politician’s daughter finds love across the ocean.
It’s 1863, and the Luna sisters are on the run. Mexico is under attack by Napoleon III, and their prominent political family has sent them to England for safety. Though their father expects all three to be discreet while there, their uncle asks them instead to be visible and charming, hoping that enjoying the company of three “goodwill ambassadors” at ball after ball will inspire the queen’s government, presently neutral, to take Mexico's side against the French. This soon brings oldest sister Ana María into contact with an unusual Member of Parliament: Mr. Gideon Fox. The grandson of a woman who'd been enslaved in South Carolina before escaping to England on a packet ship, Gideon is focused on outlawing all remaining loopholes that allow British subjects to profit from the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Though they are immediately drawn to each other, the obeisant Ana María is already promised to one of her father’s political allies, so they try to maintain a professional distance. But as the season brings them together again and again, they finally give in to their attraction just before sudden danger necessitates what seems like a marriage of convenience (that both are secretly pleased to enter), though their well-planned futures may be overturned as a result. De la Rosa launches a thrillingly different series based on the historical fact that a number of Mexicans immigrated to England in the middle of the 19th century, centering two unusual perspectives on the overwhelmingly White world of Victorian London society. Because Ana María and Gideon have had to be more mature than most socialites, their emotional explorations are careful even when things get spicy. As a result, the story's conflict primarily derives from external events, but the couple's chemistry is undeniable—and makes for compelling reading. The other triumph of the story is the development of the sisterly love among the Luna women, who in the first chapter are at odds but by the last are very close to one another; readers will look forward to the next installments, focusing on Isabel and Gabriela.
An enjoyable start to an exciting new series and a new direction for historical romance.