Difference between revisions of "No Nice Girl"
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==Book Description== | ==Book Description== | ||
− | + | When a thoroughly "nice" girl is clever as well, let her less strongly armed sisters beware. | |
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+ | Phyllis Gordon was completely honest and very intelligent. Terry McLean was her first and only lover, and he really loved her. But Phyllis cared too much for him to marry him until she had rid herself of her unrequited passion for her millionaire employer, Kenyon Rutledge. Kenyon's fiancée, Letty Lawrence, was also well equipped with beauty and brains, and she had money besides. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Yet the arrival in town of Phyllis's little country cousin, Anice Mayhew, spelled danger for both Phyllis and Letty. For Anice was dewy-eyed, supersweet and diabolically innocent. | ||
==Cover Variation (By Release Date)== | ==Cover Variation (By Release Date)== |
Latest revision as of 14:52, 26 May 2012
By Perry Lindsay | |
Publisher | Harlequin Romance #16 |
Release Month | 1949 (US) |
Harlequin Romance Series | |
Preceded by | Virgin With Butterflies |
Followed by | The D.A.'S Daughter |
- Author: Perry Lindsay
- Publisher: Harlequin Romance #16
- Year: 1949
Book Description
When a thoroughly "nice" girl is clever as well, let her less strongly armed sisters beware.
Phyllis Gordon was completely honest and very intelligent. Terry McLean was her first and only lover, and he really loved her. But Phyllis cared too much for him to marry him until she had rid herself of her unrequited passion for her millionaire employer, Kenyon Rutledge. Kenyon's fiancée, Letty Lawrence, was also well equipped with beauty and brains, and she had money besides.
Yet the arrival in town of Phyllis's little country cousin, Anice Mayhew, spelled danger for both Phyllis and Letty. For Anice was dewy-eyed, supersweet and diabolically innocent.