
During the early part of the 19th century, the British Royal Family was more German than anything else.Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. The treaty defined the boundary between Russian America and the North Western Territory, or, as we would say today, between Alaska and Canada. Petersburg got a mention mostly because I needed something Iris might have read about in the newspaper. He’s not on the agenda for the next few books, but he is definitely on the radar. Winston is one of my most popular secondary characters, having previously appeared in The Secret Diaries of Miss Miranda Cheever (brother of the hero) and What Happens in London (brother of the heroine). Winston Bevelstoke makes an appearance in the early chapters of The Secrets of Sir Richard Kenworthy.(I am also a middle child read into that what you will.) Elizabeth (the middle child) would be the middle child. Harriet (the oldest) would be the playwright, and Frances (the youngest) would be obsessed with unicorns. When I introduced the Pleinsworth girls in A Night Like This, and I realized that they were the ones who would have performed this play, it made it a breeze to create their characters. This disaster of a performance was first mentioned in It’s in His Kiss, when Hyacinth and Gareth attend what they think will be a poetry reading. The Shepherdess, the Unicorn, and Henry VIII was by far the most fun scene to write in the book.And yes, it’s difficult to keep all the facts straight. Clair.) It also appears in the epilogues of Just Like Heaven, A Night Like This, and The Sum of All Kisses. (Hence the later reference to the rakish Gareth St.

The concert that opens the story is the 1825 Smythe-Smith musicale, which makes it the same one that appears in It’s in His Kiss.
