4 out of 5 stars
This series is a retelling of The Scarlet Pimpernel and the French Revolution in an alternate timeline. Cogman has made two very agreeable twists to the tale. Firstly, she has added vampires and I am a firm believer that everything is better with vampires. Also, she has made a young English serving women the main character rather than an aristocrat.
In the first book, Eleanor was inducted into the League of the Scarlet Pimpernel because of her uncanny resemblance to Marie Antoinette. The League takes her along to France, where she proves her mettle as they rescue people scheduled for the guillotine. But Eleanor has very few reasons to trust Sir Percy Blakeney and his associates, knowing that they usually treat people of her station as possessions rather than as humans. This book finds her testing them. Will they actually listen to a young female seamstress? Will they admit when she has good ideas? When the Revolution is over, will she be free or will she revert to being chattel?
Eleanor finds that she admires the original aims of the Revolution as she understands them, namely that all people have equal worth and that includes women. She resonates with democracy rather than the monarchy of England. Eleanor has shouldered more than her share of the action in this novel. In fact she has rescued the men on several occasions and yet they scold her for taking the chances that have kept them alive and free. (In this, she reminds me of Sookie Stackhouse who comes up with original ideas for her vampire companions, solves their problems, and saves their bacon but gets dismissed as merely a female mortal.) They appreciate her but still regard her as “just" a woman, which justifiably angers her.
The novel ends with surprising news from England as they board their ship bound for home. I'll be thrilled when I manage to schedule the third book into my reading queue.






