Difference between revisions of "Mirrors And Mistakes"

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[[Category:1984 Releases]] [[Category:Category Romance]]
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[[Category:1984 Releases]]
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[[Category:Category Romance]]
 
* '''Author''': [[Kathleen Gilles Seidel]]
 
* '''Author''': [[Kathleen Gilles Seidel]]
 
* '''Publisher''': [[Harlequin American Romance]] [[Harlequin American Romance By The Numbers|# 57]]
 
* '''Publisher''': [[Harlequin American Romance]] [[Harlequin American Romance By The Numbers|# 57]]
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* '''Setting''':  
 
* '''Setting''':  
 
* '''Amazon Listing''': [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0373160577/ref=nosim/103-3685024-2000659?n=283155 Mirrors And Mistakes]
 
* '''Amazon Listing''': [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0373160577/ref=nosim/103-3685024-2000659?n=283155 Mirrors And Mistakes]
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They could never forget they were mirrors...and mistakes They were very proper Bostonians who worked hard, dressed conservatively, and ate and drank in moderation. Suzanne Lawrence, secretary to the vice-president of Southard-Colt, and Patrick Britten, the firm's most brilliant consultant, hid behind polite, cool facades - and led lives of exquisite loneliness. Identical in taste, temperament and habit, they drew together in the belief that they would always remain friends. For having known nothing more, they expected nothing more. But they never anticipated the powerful instinct that would well up in Patrick. It would teach them about love - and despair - and would bind them together forever.

Revision as of 19:55, 26 July 2021

They could never forget they were mirrors...and mistakes They were very proper Bostonians who worked hard, dressed conservatively, and ate and drank in moderation. Suzanne Lawrence, secretary to the vice-president of Southard-Colt, and Patrick Britten, the firm's most brilliant consultant, hid behind polite, cool facades - and led lives of exquisite loneliness. Identical in taste, temperament and habit, they drew together in the belief that they would always remain friends. For having known nothing more, they expected nothing more. But they never anticipated the powerful instinct that would well up in Patrick. It would teach them about love - and despair - and would bind them together forever.