All Men Glad and Wise

In 1919, Harry Green, stable lad, discovers the body of Willingford Hall’s steward. The investigation proves that Willingford Hall is nearly bankrupt. What will happen to Harry’s father, the estate’s head groom, as automobiles are making grooms unnecessary? And what will happen to Harry, a lad who is in fact a lass – supremely talented in dressage, but with no skills suitable to women? Harry resolves to discover the steward’s murderer. The decision is more dangerous than she anticipates.

The steward of Willingford Hall was murdered in the Dell on 12 March 1919. I found his body because I’d been thrown by a horse. It’s difficult to say which event was more unlikely.

Willingford Hall stable lad Harry Green is about to make a discovery even more unlikely than a corpse.

With the estate near bankruptcy and the rise of automobiles fast replacing horse travel, Harry, a young woman passing as a lad, will soon be out of a job. Facing the knowledge she has no skills in the service positions open to women, Harry resolves to discover who murdered the steward, thus becoming a woman who can determine her own future. But as her investigation proceeds, a second murder demonstrates just how dangerous her knowledge is. Soon, no matter where she rides, she finds that somebody is following her.

Part coming-of-age and part cozy mystery, All Men Glad and Wise confronts a time of tremendous social change: the inequities of service jobs, the quandaries of grooms as technology advances, and the patriarchal assumptions that exclude women from valued work and riding astride. Harry, like horsemanship-and like England-is on the cusp of a world looking forward.

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