When their father dies none of the three Harcourt girls are particularly upset. The loss of the family's income however is not something so easily overcome. When their mother Anna discovers that they have been left penniless she decides to move them out of London and back to her hometown in Scotland. Helen the demanding eldest sister decamps almost immediately to Edinburgh in search of the excitement and refinement Ryddelton cannot offer. Rosalie having always lived in her more beautiful eldest sister's shadow begins to come into her own. And Jane finds an education she could never have gotten at Oxford in her work as a secretary for Mrs Millard an eccentric biographer currently residing in the village. Anna's daughters seem to be settling down to their new life until Ronnie a tall broad-shouldered scientist steps into their lives . . .
D. E. Stevenson was born in Edinburgh in 1892 and died in 1973 aged 81. During her life she wrote 42 novels which were published on both sides of the Atlantic and sold over 7 million copies. Her fathe... more