Difference between revisions of "The Silent Valley"
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| valign="top" | '''Followed by''' || ''[[The Lady Lost Her Head]]'' | | valign="top" | '''Followed by''' || ''[[The Lady Lost Her Head]]'' | ||
|- style="background:lightgray" align="center" | |- style="background:lightgray" align="center" | ||
− | | colspan="2" | '''[[Mills and Boon Romance|Mills & Boon Romance]] Series #''' | + | | colspan="2" | '''[[Mills and Boon Romance|Mills & Boon Romance]] Series #349''' |
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| valign="top" | '''Preceded by'''||''[[The Song And The Sea]]'' | | valign="top" | '''Preceded by'''||''[[The Song And The Sea]]'' |
Latest revision as of 08:02, 8 October 2011
By Jean S. MacLeod | |
Publisher | Harlequin Romance #431 |
Release Month | 1958 (US) |
Harlequin Romance Series # | |
Preceded by | Ship'd Nurse |
Followed by | The Lady Lost Her Head |
Mills & Boon Romance Series #349 | |
Preceded by | The Song And The Sea |
Followed by | The Young Amanda |
- Author: Jean S. MacLeod
- Publisher: Harlequin Romance #431
- Year: 1958
Book Description
If I should meet thee, after long years, how should I greet thee? With silence and tears..... It would be with silence and tears, Nurse Jane Calvert knew, that she greeted Stewart Hemingway when he came as surgeon to Conyers Park Nursing Home. Years ago, when he had begged her to marry him, her love had been great enough to ask him to wait, in the interests of his career: but he had not understood. He had stormed against her "faithlessness", her "puny love", and gone away in bitterness to win brilliant success, vowing never to forgive Jane as long as he lived. And yet, even when Jane's head denied all hope, her heart stubbornly kept hpoe alive.
In one of the great romantic novels of our time, "The Silent Valley," Jean S. MacLeod tells this story of lovers who parted - and met again.