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About the Author

Penrose Halson has been a teacher, an editor, and a writer. She became a client and, in 1986, the proprietor of the Katharine Allen Marriage Advice Bureau, with which Heather Jenner's agency merged in 1992. She is the author of Happily Ever After: How to Meet Your Match. Halson is married and lives show more in London. show less

Works by Penrose Halson

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Common Knowledge

Gender
female
Nationality
UK

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Reviews

Right before the start of WWII, friends Heather and Mary decide to open a marriage bureau. The bureau gained quick popularity and became a life altering way for couples to meet. The book draws on their experiences by providing fun and compelling stories of their triumphs and failures. This was a super fun read, highly enjoyable!
 
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JanaRose1 | 21 other reviews | May 8, 2024 |
The true story of a marriage bureau, the first of its kind, in London around World War II. An idea that many saw as an impossibility, two young women knew they could make work. Heather Jennifer and Mary Oliver succeeded when no one thought they could. The book begins just prior to the decision to open the Bureau and ends on its 10th anniversary. The Bureau helped 3,000 couples meet and find love.

The book was a quick read that detailed stories of the owners and those who they interviewed. They go through their application process and tell horror stories of some of their worst clients. They also detail heartbreaking stories of some of their poorer customers who were looking for someone to grow old with. It wasn't exactly the book I thought it would be but it was still a fairly decent read.… (more)
 
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Micareads | 21 other reviews | Jun 21, 2022 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This is a charming book about a matchmaking bureau started in 1939 London by two young women. This book is full of stories of men and women - quirky, individual, with unique needs and desires - looking for spouses. It's fascinating reading about this type of system before computers, when everything was kept on note cards or in one's head. The backdrop of the book, 1939-1949 London, provides a fascinating look at life during the war and directly after. Overall this is fun, interesting, and sad at times. Recommended.… (more)
 
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tara35 | 21 other reviews | Feb 3, 2018 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
A delightful book! By turns humorous, serious, and at times heartbreaking with characters that are pompous, humble, and everywhere between Mary Oliver pitched her Uncle George's idea of the a match-making business. Mary was looking for a job that interested her so she could be independent and not marry a tediously respectable individual and wind up presiding over a tea plantation somewhere. Heather Jenner thought she was jesting when Mary told her of her idea. The book follows the Marriage Bureau from its inception through 1949 and the changing demands of its clientele, the changes in staff, and the couples that turned up for the business's tenth anniversary. An interesting and wonderful read!… (more)
 
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lisa.schureman | 21 other reviews | Dec 17, 2017 |

Statistics

Works
2
Members
124
Popularity
#161,165
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
22
ISBNs
17

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