Difference between revisions of "Abigail's Quest"

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(New page: It was no place for a woman alone. The year was 1862. New Zealand was an untamed country through which Abigail had been warned not to travel unescorted. But she felt she had no choice. Her...)
 
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[[Category:Category Romance]][[category:1980 Releases]][[category:Historical Romance]]
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* '''Author''': [[Lois Mason]]
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* '''Publisher''': [[Mills and Boon]], [[Mills and Boon Historical Romance 1 - 100|Masquerade #0052]]
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* '''Year''': 1980
 
It was no place for a woman alone. The year was 1862. New Zealand was an untamed country through which Abigail had been warned not to travel unescorted. But she felt she had no choice. Her only surviving parent, her beloved father, had set out months before in search of gold. He'd never returned, and Abigail knew that her one chance of being reunited with him lay in seeking him out herself. So she foolishly ignored the threats of cold winter winds, unfriendly Maoris and, most dangerous of all, rough, lawless men who'd been too long deprived of female companionship.
 
It was no place for a woman alone. The year was 1862. New Zealand was an untamed country through which Abigail had been warned not to travel unescorted. But she felt she had no choice. Her only surviving parent, her beloved father, had set out months before in search of gold. He'd never returned, and Abigail knew that her one chance of being reunited with him lay in seeking him out herself. So she foolishly ignored the threats of cold winter winds, unfriendly Maoris and, most dangerous of all, rough, lawless men who'd been too long deprived of female companionship.

Revision as of 02:02, 24 August 2007

It was no place for a woman alone. The year was 1862. New Zealand was an untamed country through which Abigail had been warned not to travel unescorted. But she felt she had no choice. Her only surviving parent, her beloved father, had set out months before in search of gold. He'd never returned, and Abigail knew that her one chance of being reunited with him lay in seeking him out herself. So she foolishly ignored the threats of cold winter winds, unfriendly Maoris and, most dangerous of all, rough, lawless men who'd been too long deprived of female companionship.