Difference between revisions of "His Wife The Doctor"
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| valign="top" | '''Release Month''' || 1949 (US) | | valign="top" | '''Release Month''' || 1949 (US) | ||
|- style="background:lightgray" align="center" | |- style="background:lightgray" align="center" | ||
− | | colspan="2" | '''[[Harlequin Romance|Harlequin Romance]] Series | + | | colspan="2" | '''[[Harlequin Romance|Harlequin Romance]] Series''' |
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| Valign="top" | '''Preceded by''' ||width="100px" | ''[[A Killer Is Loose Among Us]]'' | | Valign="top" | '''Preceded by''' ||width="100px" | ''[[A Killer Is Loose Among Us]]'' |
Latest revision as of 21:59, 10 May 2012
By Joseph McCord | |
Publisher | Harlequin Romance #13 |
Release Month | 1949 (US) |
Harlequin Romance Series | |
Preceded by | A Killer Is Loose Among Us |
Followed by | Six-Guns Of Sandoval |
- Author: Joseph McCord
- Publisher: Harlequin Romance #13
- Year: 1949
Book Description
Serenity Dale, M.D. was firmly established in the city as a Doctor, with an envitable reputation hor her skill and hard work. Married to Maury Parrich, a thus far unsuccessful novelist, Serenity was trying hard to prove her theory that marriage and medicine could be happily and profitably combined. All might have gone well had she not accepted, against her own wished, a position as head of a private hospital, for it was then that her difficulties really began. Before she realised what was happening. Maury was seeking inspiration elsewhere, and she became involved in professional troubles of her own presciption work, after she was shocked into a realisation work, after she was shocked into a realisation of the problem with which she was confronted.