Title | : | Love Upon The Wind |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 0373028628 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780373028627 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 187 |
Publication | : | First published August 1, 1987 |
Love Upon The Wind Reviews
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This book PROVES that HR H's really do think a perfect housekeeper is a treasure to be married. Cause you can always get another hot tartlett on the side when the steam runs out, but a lady who cleans her windows with vinegar while cooking dinner for thirty is priceless.
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Parts were very good, otherwise slow. The H was stupid about the OW, as Hs tend to be. I’m never crazy about books where h and H won’t divulge their feelings for each other, at least this time it is not due to false pride but to being unwilling to hurt the other.
Lovely dialogue at crisis point, Christmas dinner with his dad and companion: "I thought you wanted to snaffle her yourself."
"Why should you have thought that, I wonder. I already had a perfectly good wife of my own."
"You didn't have a wife; you had a housekeeper and a respectable public front. That's what I couldn't bear in the end, Nicholas...the sham and the feeling that you wanted to be free to marry Joanne. That's why I ran away."
"I never had the slightest intention of marrying Joanne, and any deception about our marriage is easily remedied, Jenny wren. That is enough for everybody to be going on with...the rest of this conversation will be conducted in private in due course." -
Uhh sure. The couple barely spends any time together, so how is this a romance? Skip.
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Lawyer Nicholas Redfern needs a wife if he wants a seat in the British Parliament....so he asked his secretary Jenny to be his wife....a marriage of convenience.
Other people in their past lives interfere and Jenny moves out....but all is well in the end. -
Clean read kisses only but not totally satisfied with ending. Never explained why he was kissing OW.