Penelope has continued on the same journey and with the same secrets (if you’ve seen the show, you will know exactly what I’m referring to). So both have grown older and perhaps more set in their ways. Colin is in his thirties and hardly ever in England, preferring travels to anywhere else than home. Her older sisters are now married and her younger sister isn’t far off a match. Why? Well, it’s now 1824 and Penelope is no longer a teenager but a cemented spinster in her late twenties. Of course, Colin is also heavily featured in this book but he doesn’t always present as the lovable, sensitive man we have known him as. The story is full of Penelope, one of the best characters in the series and includes large chunks of Lady Danbury, Eloise Bridgerton and Lady Whistledown. We’ve seen it hinted at in the first series of the television programme, now here it is in its full glory. It’s time for another instalment in the Bridgerton series! This time I’m up to the fourth book, which chronicles Penelope Featherington and Colin Bridgerton finally realising their feelings for each other. Why I chose it: Continuing my reading of the Bridgerton series, which is super fun. The not-so-good: I kind of felt for Eloise here. In brief: The fourth story in the Bridgerton series sees two favourite characters, Penelope and Colin, finally realising their feelings for each other.
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