Difference between revisions of "A House For Sharing"
(+Additional Info.) |
|||
Line 43: | Line 43: | ||
|- valign="top" | |- valign="top" | ||
| [[Image:Book-Cover-MBR0186A House For Sharing-1965-Isobel Chace.jpeg|125x197px|thumb|left|Jun 1965 <br\>UK Edition]] | | [[Image:Book-Cover-MBR0186A House For Sharing-1965-Isobel Chace.jpeg|125x197px|thumb|left|Jun 1965 <br\>UK Edition]] | ||
− | + | | [[Image:Book-Cover-HR935A House For Sharing-1965-Isobel Chace.jpeg|125x197px|thumb|left|Jul 1965 <br\>US Edition]]--> | |
|} | |} |
Revision as of 09:29, 21 March 2012
By Isobel Chace | |
Publisher | Harlequin Romance #935 |
Mills & Boon Romance #186 | |
Release Month | Jul 1965 (US) |
Jun 1965 (UK) | |
Harlequin Romance Series # | |
Preceded by | My Dear Cousin |
Followed by | Tiger Hall |
Mills & Boon Romance Series # | |
Preceded by | Islands Of Summer |
Followed by | Serenade For Doctor Bray |
- Author: Isobel Chace
- Publisher: Mills & Boon Romance #186
- Year: 1965, June
Book Description
Rosamund Peyton was looking forward immensely to her stay in Tunisia, where her stepfather was to work on an oil project in the desert, and when Rupert Harringford, the boss of the project, offered the two of them a temporary home in his house, in return for Rosamund's help with the house-keeping, she felt it was altogether a convenient arrangement. However, fascinating as it was to be living in a real Arab house, Rosamund found conditions somewhat primitive; but she gritted her teeth, determined not to be beaten by the inadequacies of an Arab kitchen and marketing in a foreign tongue. But when a glamorous French widow suddenly appeared on the scene, determined to get her elegant claws firmly into Rupert, Rosamund realised that she had a very different kind of battle on her hands!
Publication History
- 1965, June - Paperback Release (Mills & Boon Romance #186) (UK Original Release)
- 1965, July - Paperback Release (Harlequin Romance #935) (US Original Release)
Cover Variation (By Release Date)
--> |