A perfect equation

Elizabeth Everett

Book - 2022

"How do you solve the Perfect Equation? Add one sharp-tongued mathematician to an aloof, handsome nobleman. Divide by conflicting loyalties and multiply by a daring group of women hell-bent on conducting their scientific experiments. The solution is a romance that will break every rule. Six years ago, Letitia Fenley made a mistake, and she's lived with the consequences ever since. Readying herself to compete for the prestigious Rosewood Prize for Mathematics, she is suddenly asked to take on another responsibility-managing Athena's Retreat, a secret haven for England's women scientists. Having spent the last six years on her own, Letty doesn't want the offers of friendship from other club members and most certainly ...doesn't need help from the insufferably attractive Lord Greycliff. Lord William Hughes, the Viscount Greycliff cannot afford to make any mistakes. His lifelong dream of becoming the director of a powerful clandestine agency is within his grasp. Tasked with helping Letty safeguard Athena's Retreat, Grey is positive that he can control the antics of the various scientists as well as manage the tiny mathematician-despite their historic animosity and simmering tension. As Grey and Letty are forced to work together, their mutual dislike turns to admiration and eventually to something...magnetic. When faced with the possibility that Athena's Retreat will close forever, they must make a choice. Will Grey turn down a chance to change history, or can Letty get to the root of the problem and prove that love is the ultimate answer?"--

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Published
New York : Jove 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Elizabeth Everett (author)
Edition
First Edition
Physical Description
pages ; cm
ISBN
9780593200643
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

There is nothing Letitia Fenley loves more than a mathematical equation, since a properly realized equation will always yield exactly the same results. Unfortunately, Letty cannot say the same thing about William "Grey" Hughes, the Viscount Greycliff. When they are tasked by their friend Violet Kneland with running the Athena Club, Letty is continually frustrated by Grey, who one minute seems totally supportive of the members of the secret haven for female scientists and the next minute advocates shutting everything down for the safety of its members. So now the problem Letty must solve is whether the annoyingly sexy Grey is truly a threat to the Athena Club or only a threat to Letty's heart. While the credo at the Athena Club may be "Remember, no explosions please," Everett's second splendidly entertaining entry in her Secret Scientists of London series, following A Lady's Formula for Love (2021), detonates with an ingeniously orchestrated display of wit and whimsy that dazzlingly celebrates the importance of both STEM research and love in a lady's life.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Everett's enchanting sequel to A Lady's Formula for Love finds mathematician Leticia "Letty" Fenley reluctantly agreeing to oversee Athena's Retreat, a secret haven for Victorian England's female scientists, but her good intentions are soured by the unwanted help of a troublesome viscount. Letty was ostracized by Lord William Hughes, Viscount Greycliff, as well as the rest of high society when she was caught in a compromising position with his cousin. But now that they're working closely to safeguard Athena's Retreat, Greycliff realizes he's misjudged Letty, coming to see the softness beneath her resilient exterior and falling for her sharp wit and unyielding determination. Letty, in turn, breaks down Greycliff's walls, discovering gentility, empathy toward others, and curiosity about the work being done by the women of Athena's Retreat. The pair's tentative truce leads to some tender and steamy moments--the latter of which, while tantalizing, can feel a bit too abrupt--but their conflicting goals plus Greycliff's godfather's objections to their match may mean an end to their happily ever after. The supporting cast of brilliant but bumbling scientists adds some levity, and the characters' intense chemistry keeps the pages flying. This is a winner. Agent: Ann Leslie Tuttle, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret. (Feb.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

As interim head of Athena's Retreat, a secret society for female scholars, mathematician Letitia Henley has no time for love. Nor does she have any patience for the man appointed to assist her, the haughty Viscount Greycliff. Greycliff is equally averse to aiding Letitia, who was formerly the subject of a ruinous scandal, and whose short stature belies her unending obstinacy. When they are forced to work together and protect the Retreat and its eccentric, but endearing, members, they realize that their perceptions of each other were flawed, and that, where love is concerned, the whole is sometimes more than the sum of its parts. Everett's second installment in the "Secret Scientists of London" series is just as intelligent and entertaining as the first. Though the physical relationship builds somewhat slowly, it is all the more gratifying when it reaches the steamy summit. Narrator Elizabeth Jasicki has a mature voice that is well suited to the cast of learned ladies and gives a unique expression to each character. VERDICT This audio will appeal to listeners seeking an engaging enemies-to-lovers tale that is as erudite as it is erotic. Recommended for fans of Minerva Spencer and Joanna Lowell.--Lauren Hackert

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A single-minded duke and a lady mathematician make two halves into a perfect whole. Where were all the female scientists and mathematicians in Victorian England? Hiding in plain sight, it seems, at Athena's Retreat, London's only social club for ladies. Miss Letitia Fenley--Letty to her fellow geniuses--is their erstwhile leader, but she just wants to focus on preparing for the upcoming Rosewood Prize for Mathematics competition. Having made one public misstep years ago, she's now happy to be a spinster and focus on proofs. Unfortunately, in keeping the raucous ladies' club from (literally) exploding, she has a partner: William Hughes, Viscount Greycliff. Grey and Letty have some history and do not care for each other at all, despite an obvious attraction. All they have to do is keep the chaos to a minimum and avoid each other, but when Grey's nomination to a leadership role he's worked toward for years is at stake, he agrees to close the club entirely to please the Guardians of Domesticity, a men's group that blames "unnatural" women for the ills of the empire. This announcement stokes the chaos to maximum levels and forces Letty away from her Rosewood preparations to the Retreat's defense. In trying to convince Grey that her colleagues must be allowed to stay, she grows even closer to him, resulting in more sparks than the experiments upstairs--but they cannot have both each other and their individual long-cherished dreams for the future. The second book in Everett's Secret Scientists of London series stands out among recent feminist historical romances thanks to a fierce enemies-to-lovers plotline and a sexual tension that is built slowly and expertly. The story can be read alone, but first timers will be inspired to go back to her debut, A Lady's Formula for Love(2021) thanks to the smart writing and charming storytelling. Though Letty and Grey are standard romance characters, the series introduces readers to a diverse group at the Retreat, which hints at a promising future direction for the series. An enchanting feminist Victorian romance. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 London, 1843 "A woman's place is in the home!" Miss Letitia Fenley stopped in her tracks at that declaration. What a choker! Everyone knew a woman's place was in charge, if you want something done right. Another winter had come to London and stubbornly refused to be gone. These bleak weeks of March more resembled February, an in-between time when the sun sullenly peeked out from behind the clouds now and then, waiting for the world to be pretty enough to bother with. Letty Fenley and her brother, Sam, traversed the streets of Clerkenwell. Strung out in a grim leer, buildings stained dark yellow and brown from decades of soot and humidity squeezed together like crooked teeth, the second and third stories leaning over to rub against the ones next door. The cobbles under their feet were greasy and half-submerged beneath a mix of mud, manure, and straw. The two of them were headed for the grander environs of Bloomsbury, where, amid its walled gardens and wooden walkways, they'd be more likely to find a hack. Halting their progress was a crowd of angry men blocking the road, holding rudely painted signs and shouting ridiculous slogans in front of an unremarkable brick building. The shingle hanging over the door read messrs. jewell & hoyt, candlemakers. The store's owner had turned his sign to closed and pulled the curtains tight against the ire of folks marching on the walk outside. Letty stood on her toes at the edge of the crowd to better view the happenings. Another pea-souper of a fog had sprung up, and invisible motes of coal smut coated the back of her throat from breathing in the noxious air. She pulled the high collar of her mantle around her mouth and nose. "Why are you stopping?" grumbled her brother, eyes fixed on the road as he tried to keep his boots clear of the worst of the ruts, his head no doubt filled with work. "Bad enough I have to take time away from the store to escort you to your club. Worse is when time is wasted by your . . ." Glancing up, Sam took in the scene before them for the first time. "What nonsense is this?" He squinted through the fog at the commotion. "Who're these never-sweats blocking the street at midday when there is business to be conducted?" With no time to read anything other than accounting ledgers, Sam had missed the latest news regarding the rise of the Guardians of Domesticity. Groveling at the feet of the aristocracy and blaming women for the ills of society, the Guardians hid behind a facade of respectability, with lectures and charity work that claimed to celebrate the traditional British family and women's role as keeper of the hearth. Their true colors came into view when they found a business contributing to the "downfall of civilization" by employing young women in their shops and factories. "Ladies should be taking care of men's needs instead of taking men's wages," shouted one man, flushed with an angry joy. He'd found a captive audience for his complaints as he shook a meaty fist in the face of a slender young woman trying to sidle past him and make her way into the shop. A shop's assistant, no doubt, hired for pennies per week, working dawn to dusk for a pittance of what a male assistant might make. Although the girl's poke bonnet hid her face, the set of her shoulders and bowed head signaled distress. Letty clenched her fingers. Despite the dank mist freezing her toes, heat rose in her chest. "How dare those oafs frighten that poor girl. Why, I am going to-" "You are going to do nothing but make your way to your ladies' club," Sam growled, pulling Letty by the sleeve away from the crowd. Unlike the shopgirl's threadbare cloak, Letty's deep blue mantle was made of the finest wool, the discreet trim done in costly velvet. "Da says I'm to get you there without incident, and that's what I intend to do." Scratching his head, Sam read a large banner near them. "What is this nonsense supposed to accomplish? 'Take care of men,' indeed." His golden hair appeared dirty brown in the low light, but nothing could hide the sudden glint of humor in his piercing blue eyes. "Good luck getting you, or those secret scientists you keep company with, to have anything to do with men. Unless it's to blow them up." Letty admonished her brother while keeping an eye on the clerk. "We haven't blown anyone up. Well, one time, by accident. Besides, the purpose of the club is to study all aspects of science, not just the ones that make noise." Letty was accustomed to defending Athena's Retreat. Ostensibly a social club for ladies to gather for lectures on the natural sciences, behind closed doors it served as a haven for women to conduct experiments, do research, and simply take the time away from the pressures of their duties to reflect on theories and ideas. The Fenley family's wealth allowed Letty the freedom to study her passion-mathematics-but that didn't mean her family understood why she and the other club members were driven to sacrifice their time and, in some cases, their opportunity to marry well or climb higher in society. "Can't imagine what those scoundrels think shouting at ladies will accomplish," Sam continued, still clutching her sleeve. "If I shouted at you or our sisters, what would happen?" "We'd tell you to shut up, and put toads in your bed," Letty said distractedly. "You'd tell me to shut up, and put toads in my bed," Sam agreed with good-natured humor. He craned his neck to see over the thickening crowd. "If I had a banner and waved it in your faces, would you listen to me?" he asked wistfully. "Big sign saying 'Stop Reading in Front of the Customers' or 'Stop Trying on the Bonnets You're Supposed to Sell' or 'Stop Putting Face Cream in the Icebox.'" "Not likely," Letty told him. "If you want us to work for free at the emporium, you need to give us incentives." Fenley's Fantastic Fripperies, the largest emporium in London, parted the city's ladies from their coin by offering a dazzling array of articles ranging from the utilitarian to the useless. "It's a family business," he said. "Familial duty is your incentive. Not to mention free face cream, which does not belong in the icebox despite your incomprehensible blather about solids and temperature and matter-of-facts." "Not matter-of-facts," Letty corrected him. "States of matter. You see, when the temperature increases, certain substances-" "Twice now, I've put it on my toast." Sam pulled a face and shuddered. "Tastes like a scolding from Aunt Bess. Ugh." Letty laughed, but when Sam checked his pocket watch, all traces of a smile vanished from his face. "I cannot be away from the emporium any longer. Let's slip away from this mess and-" "Bring back the better days of Britain!" Letty loosed herself from Sam's grip, the rest of his words muffled by the roaring of blood in her veins. "Guardians of Stupidity is what you are." Letty raised her voice, glaring at the men around her. "Fools and bullies who think they know better than women. Back to the kitchen? As though running a household doesn't require as many skills as running a business." Slipping through the crowd, Letty approached the building as a thin wail rose from the doorway. A beady-eyed man with a pinched mouth and spidery fingers had grabbed the shopgirl by the wrist, halting her escape. "Don't bother trying to go to work. We're shutting this place down until they stop employing women in their factories and hire the men back," the man said. A tinkling of broken glass punctuated his threat as someone launched a sign at the ground-floor window of the shop. The atmosphere turned in an instant from hectoring to predatory. With a foreshadowing of violence, the group of individuals molded into a single organism-a dragon ready to pounce on whatever threatened. This monster's hoard consisted of power rather than gold. "Oh, no, you don't," Letty said through gritted teeth, clenching the straps of her heavy reticule in one hand. "Letty!" Sam called after her. "Letty Fenley, you come back here this instant. I know you don't listen to me, but for goodness' sake, will you listen to me?" Fear set her stomach to churning, but Letty allowed nothing to show on her face. Instead, she stuck her chin out and her shoulders back. Never again would she suffer a man intimidating her into submission, and she'd be damned if she watched this happen to any other woman. As Flavia Smythe-Harrows always said, sexual dimorphism does not excuse bad behavior. What a pity Letty didn't have that printed on a banner. Without benefit of a rival sign, she used what was available in the moment. Swinging her reticule around twice to achieve maximal momentum, Letty brought it down, hard, on the wrist of Beady Eyes. "You let go of that girl, right now, you weasel-faced, onion-breathed . . ." Letty's stream of insults was drowned in the crowd's protest at the sight of their fellow man being assaulted by what someone deemed "half a pint-sized shrew." "Half a pint indeed," Letty shouted back. "I'm less than an inch shorter than the median height for a woman of my weight, based on-Oy, stop waving that sign in my face." Before Letty could take another swing at Beady Eyes, the sound of horses whinnying and men shouting from somewhere at the edge of the crowd broke the tension; a decrescendo from taunting voices to garbled protests heralded the arrival of authority. Jumping up for a better look, Letty spied two well-dressed men on horseback. "On your way," a clipped, aristocratic voice shouted to the crowd. "Disperse at once." The crowd buckled, its mood shifting from dangerous to frustrated. Letty protected the girl as best she could from the sudden shoving around them. Most of her attention, however, fixed on the familiarity of those crisp, clean syllables echoing in the air. She would know that voice anywhere. Their rescue rode toward them in the form of Lord William Hughes, the Viscount Greycliff. A traitorous wave of relief that he would put an end to the danger was quickly followed by a cold dose of shame. Six years ago, she'd believed him the epitome of nobility and elegance until that voice had delivered a verdict upon her head. The words he'd said and the pain they'd caused were etched into her memory forever. "I don't care if you're Prince Albert himself. Move your arse, man!" A deeper baritone, the voice of Greycliff's companion, now carried over the crowd. "Put down the signs, or I'll put them down for you." "Are they here to rescue us?" the girl asked. Visions of Greycliff riding up on a snow white steed flashed before Letty's eyes. A handful of years before, such an image would have set her heart to racing and put roses on her cheeks. She would have caught her ruffled skirts in one hand, ready to be swept away by a hero, lit from behind by a shaft of golden sunlight. Not anymore. The dirty grey-brown reality of working-class London remained solid and smelly before her eyes. These days, romantic scenes remained between the pages of a well-thumbed book. "Never wait for someone else to rescue you," Letty advised. "Especially a man. They'll ride away on those fine horses afterward, and where will you be? Still here, cleaning the mess, having to work for an owner who couldn't even be bothered to come out here after you. Rescue yourself, my dear." "Shall we run for it?" "We could, but I've a better idea." Letty turned to Beady Eyes and held up her reticule. The man flinched, but she had other plans. "Want to get rid of two troublesome women?" she asked him. Pouring out a palmful of coins, Letty made an offer. "Here's your chance." Excerpted from A Perfect Equation by Elizabeth Everett All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.