* 2 1/2 starsOne of those free romance novels that I downloaded during a period of my life where all things that were free were worth getting. This wasn't that bad. or that smutty.. now that I think about it. And the plot though unoriginal had some plot twists and elements that made the book diff...
This book is a typical happily-ever-after romance book.Basically, this wedding planner had to face the billionaire to discuss the costs that the wedding incurred especially now that the bride-to-be ran off with one of the wedding planner's staff members. The groom wasn't happy about the event bu...
I loved the strong characters in this story. Sylvie Smith is an events planner and one of her school friends uses her for her upcoming wedding to self-made billionaire Tom McFarlane. A cliché and wedding planner’s worst nightmare occurs when the bride-to-be runs off with Sylvie’s assistant. This ...
In the stuffy Law firm where Tom Brodie is a partner, he is considered not quite the right type to deal with the ultra rich, spoilt, troublesome Emerald Carlisle. Unfortunately for his fellow partners, when a summons from Gerald Carlisle, Emerald's father arrives, Tom is the only available perso...
AN ORDINARY GIRL is another strong entry from the somewhat restricted imagination of Betty Neels. Here we have a change of pace. No crazy Dutch names this time! It's Doctor James Forsyth falling for Philly Selby, with his fiancée, the spoiled but sleek Sybil, making every spiteful effort to keep...
CITY GIRL IN TRAINING Philly Gresham never wanted to be a "city girl". Much to the annoyance of her parents, the amusement of her clever brothers and sisters and the exasperation of her boss, she had no ambition at all. She just wanted to stay in the town where she'd been born, marry the boy next...
All Tash had was the street name, but she had been confident that a prize-winning sculptor’s studio would be easy enough to find. She was wrong. She’d reached a dead end and found no sign, no indication that art of any kind happened behind any of th...
—from Rosie’s ‘Little Book of Ice Cream’ ‘You shouldn’t be telling me that,’ Alexander said, telling himself that he didn’t give a hoot who or what she was. Or her business. And as for Nancy, he’d paid her off... Just like your father... The words d...
I’d rather fall in ice cream. —Rosie’s Diary SEAN took his time over the coffee. The lesson, he reflected, was never to ask a question to which you didn’t want to hear the answer. He was practised at that. Good at keeping things light. People at a distance. Never digging beneath the surface to fi...
Too quickly. ‘At least not the first part. I’ve learned a lot about you.’ He shut the doors of the wood burner, carefully replaced the poker on its stand and propped his elbow on the mantelpiece, hoping that he looked a lot more relaxed about this than he felt. ‘You’re a talented designer. You ha...
‘Have you got a minute, Jim?’ she asked. Jim Ryan, a burly man in his late thirties, was sitting behind his desk organising the bulletins and “carts” for the major news and local current affairs programme on the hour. ‘Two minutes for you, Fizz, my darling,’ he said, easily, without looking up fr...