Difference between revisions of "Opposites Attract - Karen Pershing"
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* '''Year''': 1986 | * '''Year''': 1986 | ||
* '''Setting''': | * '''Setting''': | ||
− | * '''Amazon Listing''' | + | * '''Amazon Listing''': [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0373161689/ref=nosim/103-3685024-2000659?n=283155 Opposites Attract] |
+ | |||
+ | == Book Description == | ||
Some people fell in love, others were bamboozled into it. Carrie Sutherland had unusual standards. A free spirit from the San Fernando Valley, Carrie wouldn't date anyone whose apartment wasn't a wreck and whose life wasn't in constant uproar. Carrie vehemently objected to Max Wheeler, a man who was abnormally well dressed, excruciatingly polite and superhumanly organized. As Carrie told Max, free spirits and stuffed shirts were like oil and water—they just didn't mix. Which was why otherwise predictable, conventional Max came up with an alternative to romance, one that sounded outrageous even to Carrie's ears. | Some people fell in love, others were bamboozled into it. Carrie Sutherland had unusual standards. A free spirit from the San Fernando Valley, Carrie wouldn't date anyone whose apartment wasn't a wreck and whose life wasn't in constant uproar. Carrie vehemently objected to Max Wheeler, a man who was abnormally well dressed, excruciatingly polite and superhumanly organized. As Carrie told Max, free spirits and stuffed shirts were like oil and water—they just didn't mix. Which was why otherwise predictable, conventional Max came up with an alternative to romance, one that sounded outrageous even to Carrie's ears. |
Revision as of 19:45, 9 October 2007
- Author: Karen Pershing
- Publisher: Harlequin American Romance # 168
- Year: 1986
- Setting:
- Amazon Listing: Opposites Attract
Book Description
Some people fell in love, others were bamboozled into it. Carrie Sutherland had unusual standards. A free spirit from the San Fernando Valley, Carrie wouldn't date anyone whose apartment wasn't a wreck and whose life wasn't in constant uproar. Carrie vehemently objected to Max Wheeler, a man who was abnormally well dressed, excruciatingly polite and superhumanly organized. As Carrie told Max, free spirits and stuffed shirts were like oil and water—they just didn't mix. Which was why otherwise predictable, conventional Max came up with an alternative to romance, one that sounded outrageous even to Carrie's ears.