Difference between revisions of "Towards The Dawn"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
{| | {| | ||
|- valign="top" | |- valign="top" | ||
+ | | [[Image:Book-Cover-MBRHbTowards The Dawn-1956-Jane Arbor.jpeg|125x197px|thumb|left|1956 <br\>UK HB Edition]] | ||
+ | | [[Image:Book-Cover-HR0474Towards The Dawn-1959-Jane Arbor.jpeg|125x197px|thumb|left|1959 <br\>US Edition]] | ||
| [[Image:Book-Cover-MBR0372Towards The Dawn-1969-Jane Arbor.jpeg|125x197px|thumb|left|1969 <br\>UK Edition]] | | [[Image:Book-Cover-MBR0372Towards The Dawn-1969-Jane Arbor.jpeg|125x197px|thumb|left|1969 <br\>UK Edition]] | ||
|} | |} |
Revision as of 18:02, 4 July 2012
By Jane Arbor | |
Publisher | Mills & Boon Romance #372 |
Release Month | 1969 (UK) |
Mills & Boon Romance Series # | |
Preceded by | The Girl For Gillgong |
Followed by | Second Chance |
- Author: Jane Arbor
- Publisher: Mills & Boon Romance #372
- Year: 1969
Book Description
Vivien was naturally excited - what girl wouldn't be? - at setting off for France to pay a visit to the grandmother she had never known. To her relief they got on well together, so well that Vivien soon found herself helping to take charge of the factory where the Cordet family had been producing exquisite hand-sewn gloves for so many years. But Marthe Cordet, relieved of some of her work, had no intention of sitting idle. She now proposed to set about arranging a marriage for Vivien - an idea which Vivien, with her English views on marriage, strongly resisted. The question was, would she be able to circumvent, or even fully to guess at, the plans laid by Mathe's affectionate cunning?