Difference between revisions of "Dead Magnolias"

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[[Category:1993 Releases]] [[Category:Category Romance]][[Category:Romantic Suspense]] [[Category:Alabama]]
 
[[Category:1993 Releases]] [[Category:Category Romance]][[Category:Romantic Suspense]] [[Category:Alabama]]
 
* '''Author''': [[M.L. Gamble]]
 
* '''Author''': [[M.L. Gamble]]
* '''Publisher''': [[Intrigue]], [[Harlequin Intrigue By The Numbers|# 226]]
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* '''Publisher''': [[Intrigue|Harlequin Intrigue]] [[Harlequin Intrigue By The Numbers|# 226]]
 
* '''Year''': 1993
 
* '''Year''': 1993
 
* '''Setting''': Alabama
 
* '''Setting''': Alabama
* '''Amazon Listing''' - [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0373222262/ref=nosim/103-3685024-2000659?n=283155 Dead Magnolias]
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* '''Amazon Listing''': [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0373222262/ref=nosim/103-3685024-2000659?n=283155 Dead Magnolias]
 
 
== About The Book ==
 
  
 +
== Book Description ==
 
In the steamy dog days of an Alabama August, P.I. Teresa Worth struggled with her cases.  Her kidnapped daughter remained top priority-—then came hit-and-run murders, petty thieves and men like Wells Talmadge.
 
In the steamy dog days of an Alabama August, P.I. Teresa Worth struggled with her cases.  Her kidnapped daughter remained top priority-—then came hit-and-run murders, petty thieves and men like Wells Talmadge.
  

Revision as of 16:44, 1 October 2007

Book Description

In the steamy dog days of an Alabama August, P.I. Teresa Worth struggled with her cases. Her kidnapped daughter remained top priority-—then came hit-and-run murders, petty thieves and men like Wells Talmadge.

The born-and-bred rebel took his stand in a vice-ridden stronghold of antebellum power, where gambling and illicit love affairs were tolerated. But now, people associated with Wells’s family were vanishing...or dead.

Caught between blood ties and justice, Wells meant to beat Teresa to the murderer. Instead, she led him toward the dark truths that would tear his world asunder…and toward the moment when she might reclaim her daughter.

Wells had underestimated Teresa, but she had misjudged his powers, too—not of money and prestige, but of caring and seduction.