In London Lavender: An entertainment, E. V. Lucas offers a gracefully miscellaneous portrait of London, blending essay, urban sketch, anecdote, and reflective observation into a light yet finely discriminating prose work. The book belongs to the distinguished tradition of the familiar essay and the literary topography of the city, where streets, habits, moods, and minor spectacles acquire enduring significance. Lucas's style is urbane, witty, and deceptively effortless: he writes with Edwardian poise, a flâneur's curiosity, and a connoisseur's affection for the small particulars that reveal a metropolis's character. Lucas, long celebrated as an essayist, humorist, editor, and man of letters, was especially suited to such a book. Deeply immersed in English literary culture, associated with publishers, periodicals, and the essay tradition descending from Lamb, he possessed both the observational patience and tonal tact necessary to transform everyday London into literature. His lifelong engagement with the city-its manners, rhythms, and quiet absurdities-clearly informs this affectionate and cultivated entertainment. This book is particularly recommended to readers who value elegant prose, urban literature, and the art of attentive noticing. Those interested in London's cultural memory, in the essay as a literary form, or in the refined pleasures of early twentieth-century English writing will find Lucas an intelligent and companionable guide.