Thursday, January 9, 2025

Book Beginnings, First Line Friday, & Friday 56: A Lady's Guide to Marvels and Misadventure by Angela Bell

Book Beginnings is a weekly meme hosted by Rose City Reader that asks you to share the first sentence (or so) of the book you're reading. I'm also linking up with Carrie at Reading is My Superpower for First Line Friday. Friday 56 asks you to grab a book (any book), turn to page 56 or 56% in your ereader and share a non-spoilery sentence or two. It was started by Freda at Freda's Voice, but Anne over at My Head is Full of Books has taken over for the time being.

This week I'm featuring A Lady's Guide to Marvels and Misadventure by Angela Bell. This is such a fun story! 

About the Book
Miss Clara Marie Stanton's family may be eccentric, but they certainly aren't insane.

London, England, 1860
When Clara's ex-fiancé begins to spread rumors that her family suffers from hereditary insanity, it's all she can do to protect them from his desperate schemes, society's prejudice, and a lifetime in an asylum. Then Clara's Grandfather Drosselmeyer brings on an apprentice with a mechanical leg, and all pretense of normalcy takes wing.

Theodore Kingsley, a shame-chased vagabond haunted by the war, wants a fresh start far from Kingsley Court and the disappointed father who declared him dead. Upon returning to England, Theodore meets clockmaker Drosselmeyer, who hires him as an apprentice, much to Clara's dismay. When Drosselmeyer spontaneously disappears in his secret flying owl machine, he leaves behind a note for Clara, beseeching her to make her dreams of adventure a reality by joining him on a merry scavenger hunt across Europe. Together, Clara and Theodore set off to follow Drosselmeyer's trail of clues, but they will have to stay one step ahead of a villain who wants the flying machine for himself--at any cost.

Book Beginnings / First Line Friday
February 1860
London, England
For Miss Clara Marie Stanton, the task of preventing her family from being committed to an asylum had become as commonplace as it was exhausting.

Friday 56
Dreaming beneath the roof of the Canopy of Stars Hotel was a notion Clara could fathom, but total dependence on another - even the Maker of the heavens - was a thought her mind struggled to comprehend.

What have you been reading lately?

5 comments:

  1. This sounds like one I'd love. Thank you for sharing!

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  2. This does sound like a very fun read! I definitely want to check this one out. :D

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  3. I think commitment to insane asylums was much more common in the past. Without cause, sometimes. Or women were committed for menopause. Egads.

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  4. I am in love with that title. LOL I definitely want to read this one! I hope you have a great weekend, Ashley!

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