Difference between revisions of "The Cloud Holders"

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(added finalist book page)
 
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[[Category:RWA Award Finalists]]
 
[[Category:RWA Award Finalists]]
 
[[Category:1991 Releases]]
 
[[Category:1991 Releases]]
* '''Series''': [[]]
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* '''Series''': Whitewater #2
 
* '''Author''': [[Bethany Campbell]]
 
* '''Author''': [[Bethany Campbell]]
 
* '''Publisher''': [[Harlequin Romance]]
 
* '''Publisher''': [[Harlequin Romance]]
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* '''Editors''': [[Dianne Moggy]] & [[Pat Cooney]]
 
* '''Editors''': [[Dianne Moggy]] & [[Pat Cooney]]
 
* '''Amazon Listing''' : []
 
* '''Amazon Listing''' : []
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==Book Description==
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"Whitewater—I hate you!"
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And she hated this "fool ritual" that had sent her halfway around the world.
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But Piper Gordon had promised her grandmother that she'd return the centuries—old funeral necklace to Hawaii, as the law now demanded. Even if it meant destorying the beautiful object by sacrificing it to the goddess Pele. Even if it meant spending time with a man she was determined to dislike—David Whitewater, a man who had once ruthlessly prosecuted her grandmother.
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To Piper's fury, the Native American lawyer had been appointed to accompany her to Hawaii. But was it just David Whitewater and what he represented that disturbed Piper so deeply, or was it the growing attraction between them?
  
 
== Recognitions ==  
 
== Recognitions ==  
 
* [[1992 RITA® Winners & Finalists|1992 RITA® Finalist]] for [[RITA®: Contemporary Romance Categories|Traditional Romance]]
 
* [[1992 RITA® Winners & Finalists|1992 RITA® Finalist]] for [[RITA®: Contemporary Romance Categories|Traditional Romance]]

Revision as of 04:06, 6 September 2021

Book Description

"Whitewater—I hate you!"

And she hated this "fool ritual" that had sent her halfway around the world.

But Piper Gordon had promised her grandmother that she'd return the centuries—old funeral necklace to Hawaii, as the law now demanded. Even if it meant destorying the beautiful object by sacrificing it to the goddess Pele. Even if it meant spending time with a man she was determined to dislike—David Whitewater, a man who had once ruthlessly prosecuted her grandmother.

To Piper's fury, the Native American lawyer had been appointed to accompany her to Hawaii. But was it just David Whitewater and what he represented that disturbed Piper so deeply, or was it the growing attraction between them?

Recognitions