Difference between revisions of "Spring's Awakening"
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(New page: Category:1986 Releases Category:Category Romance * '''Author''': Jacqueline Ashley * '''Publisher''': Harlequin American Romance, [[Harlequin American By The Numbe...) |
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− | [[Category:1986 Releases]] [[Category:Category Romance]] | + | [[Category:1986 Releases]] [[Category:Category Romance]][[Category:Kansas City]][[Category:Missouri]][[Category:Ranchers/Farmers]] |
− | * '''Author''': [[Jacqueline Ashley]] | + | * '''Author''': [[Jacqueline Ashley]] |
− | * '''Publisher''': [[ | + | * '''Publisher''': [[Harlequin American Romance]] [[Harlequin American Romance By The Numbers|# 157]] |
* '''Year''': 1986 | * '''Year''': 1986 | ||
− | * '''Setting''': | + | * '''Setting''': Kansas City, Missouri |
− | * '''Amazon Listing''' | + | * '''Amazon Listing''': [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0373161573/ref=nosim/103-3685024-2000659?n=283155 Spring's Awakening] |
+ | |||
+ | == Book Description == | ||
+ | Cousin Gail had told a whopper | ||
+ | |||
+ | But Maggie Sinclair didn't know it. If Maggie had known, she would have been calmer during the family reunion on her Kansas City farm. She might not have fluttered nervously from group to group, avoiding a man who defined masculinity, who breathed new meaning into her name whenever he spoke it. If Maggie had known that Sam Matthews was not Cousin Gail's fiance, nor her lover, nor even romantically inclined toward Gail, Maggie might not have felt so terrible about certain unruly instincts that were reacting indecently to Sam's advances. Maggie, however, was totally in the dark. |
Latest revision as of 23:38, 2 January 2009
- Author: Jacqueline Ashley
- Publisher: Harlequin American Romance # 157
- Year: 1986
- Setting: Kansas City, Missouri
- Amazon Listing: Spring's Awakening
Book Description
Cousin Gail had told a whopper
But Maggie Sinclair didn't know it. If Maggie had known, she would have been calmer during the family reunion on her Kansas City farm. She might not have fluttered nervously from group to group, avoiding a man who defined masculinity, who breathed new meaning into her name whenever he spoke it. If Maggie had known that Sam Matthews was not Cousin Gail's fiance, nor her lover, nor even romantically inclined toward Gail, Maggie might not have felt so terrible about certain unruly instincts that were reacting indecently to Sam's advances. Maggie, however, was totally in the dark.