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An escape to the country A kiss to reawaken them both… Honeysuckle Rose finds much-needed solace in her great aunt’s garden. But her peace is threatened by her distracting and brooding neighbor, Lucien Grey. Once a high-flying news reporter, Lucien returned from the front line a changed man. Honey can see that beneath his frosty exterior is a heart waiting to be thawed. Can their unexpected but impossible-to-ignore midsummer kiss be the beginning of a fresh start…together? “It was superb, there is chemistry, but also a really engaging storyline…. I really did enjoy every moment of this easy to read, and really entertaining story.” -Goodreads on Christmas Reunion in Paris “This book made me fall in love with romance all over again. Sweet, charming characters wooed me from the onset. I was mesmerized with the sharp, vivid writing, and literally entertained with all the drama, banter and shenanigans of the main protagonists. Overall, a fab story I’m positive romance lovers will love from start to end!” -Goodreads on A Secret, a Safari, a Second Chance
Harlequin Romance – March ‘22 – Box Set Harlequin® Romance brings you a collection of four new titles, available now! Experience the rush of falling in love! This Harlequin® Romance box set includes: #4795 REDEEMED BY HER MIDSUMMER KISS By Liz Fielding Honeysuckle finds solace in her great aunt’s country garden. But her peace is threatened by her brooding neighbour, ex high flying news reporter, Lucien. He returned from the front line a changed man. But can one unexpected midsummer kiss become a fresh start for them both…? #4796 SECOND CHANCE WITH HIS CINDERELLA By Kandy Shepherd Life hasn’t been kind to billionaire Sebastian or the intriguing woman he’s hired to organize his London mansion. Kitty may be cautious, yet she soon notices there’s more to this reluctant billionaire than his intoxicating charm. But are they both ready to take another chance? #4797 ONE WEEK IN VENICE WITH THE CEO By Kate Hardy Penniless Contessa needs to rebuild her family’s palazzo in Venice, and she has just seven days to persuade handsome CEO Gianni to help! Neither are looking for a relationship, but as the romance of Venice casts its spell, can this week together change their lives – forever? #4798 BABY SURPRISE FOR THE MILLIONAIRE By Ruby Basu Tycoon Nathan was Saira’s first love…he’s also her best friend’s brother! So, a reunion at her friend’s engagement party is unavoidable. Only Saira can’t refuse the bride-to-be’s invitation to a luxury getaway - where she’s forced into sharing a villa with Nathan…
The consequence… …of their Maltese nights! Hotel tycoon Nathan Haynes isn’t just Saira Dey’s first love…he’s her best friend’s brother! So a reunion at his sister’s engagement party is unavoidable. If only it didn’t lead to another reunion with Nathan! While Saira can’t say no to the bride-to-be’s offer of a Maltese getaway, sharing a luxury villa with Nathan makes their unfinished business clear…and they’re tempted into a fling. Will the consequence of their Mediterranean nights help them realize they never stopped loving each other?
Tudor England, 1559 The Virgin Queen's Court whispers about shy scholar Lady Linnet Norwood, who spent a year and a day trapped in the Faerie realm and returned as a ruined woman. Linnet, however, is not yet free of magick. Otherworldly forces plot to use her to incite a bloody uprising that will twist the fates of mortal and Faerie realms alike. Exiled angel Zamiel wavers on the edge of accepting an offer from his fallen father to become Prince of Hell. Lucifer knows Lady Linnet's significance, and urges his son to pursue and protect her for sinister ends. As Linnet flees those who would make her a pawn, Zamiel follows, tempting her trust and her passion. But the more he employs his killing rage on her behalf, the more he dreams of laying it aside in favor of peace. If the two can find faith together, they might sunder the unholy alliance that threatens the dawn of the Golden Age of England. Book two of The Magick Trilogy. 99,000 words
A romantic novel rich in the history of the 12th century, concerning France'sKing Philippe-Auguste and his 10-year-old bride.
Kelsang and Dukar Kaiser, my sister Elsa. Kel sang, Duwhat and Kaiser, I said, trying to remember the very unusual-sounding name, though the contrast with the obviously German family name had me puzzled, when the attractive young couple left. Our next-door neighbors are Tibetan by birth, German Swiss through adoption. Their life stories, although short, read like a movie plot, my sister Gloria explained. I met the beautiful Kelsang and Dukar Kaiser again a few months later when my husband and I visited my sister. We barely made it to Bhutan in 1959. Eventually my family settled in Dharamsala, India, practically next door to the Dalai Lama, Kelsang offered. Two years later in 1961, my family was also forced to flee the country, Dukar contributed. In my ignorance of genetic code, I found Dukar more Tibetan looking. He impressed all of us with his vast knowledge on many subjects, which he expressed with an articulate command of the English language. Although his persona could have been viewed as reserved, he was both gregarious and sociable. Why dont you ask them if you could write their life stories, Elsa? I think they would like it, Gloria suggested. They did, and I spent the next few days interviewing them. The story unfolded slowly, though only partially, due to their tender age: they were five and seven years old when they fled Tibet with their family as political refugees. The moments they never forgot were the fear and the horrors of what they saw, the constant hunger, and the weariness of the long journey. After many months of research and three moves, military transfer, from the Atlantic to the Pacific coasts and back to the Atlantic, I was able to put together a story based on the personal tragedy and triumph of these two youngsters.
In this examination of Sir Philip Sidney, author of the famous romance, The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia , and his family, Elizabeth Mazzola argues that families are a form of poetic projects. The Sidney family, and members of the so-called 'Sidney circle' aimed to celebrate Sir Philip's life through literary tradition - they repeatedly turned to writing their own poetry as a vehicle to analyze or extend familial connections. Mazzola illustrates that Sidney's family, by celebrating the work of their brilliant loved one, actually demonstrated the unique attributes and transformation of the family in the early modern period.
The ten essays in this collection explore the discrete yet overlapping female spaces of privacy and domesticity in early modern England. While other literary critics have focused their studies of female privacy on widows, witches, female recusants and criminals, the contributors to this collection propose that the early modern subculture of femaleness is more expansive and formative than is typically understood. They maintain that the subculture includes segregated, sometimes secluded, domestic places for primarily female activities like nursing, sewing, cooking, and caring for children and the sick. It also includes hidden psychological realms of privacy, organized by women's personal habits, around intimate friendships or kinship, and behind institutional powerlessness. The texts discussed in the volume include plays not only by Shakespeare but also Ford, Wroth, Marvell, Spenser and Cavendish, among others. Through the lens of literature, contributors consider the unstructured, fluid quality of much everyday female experience as well as the dimensions, symbols, and the ever-changing politics and culture of the household. They analyze the complex habits of female settings-the verbal, spatial, and affective strategies of early-modern women's culture, including private rituals, domestic practices, and erotic attachments-in order to provide a broader picture of female culture and of female authority. The authors argue-through a range of critical approaches that include feminist, historical, and psychoanalytic-that early modern women often transformed their confinement into something useful and necessary, creating protected and even sacred spaces with their own symbols and aesthetic.