Difference between revisions of "Moon Of Laughing Flame"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(add author, year, categories) |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | [[Category:Category Romance]][[category:1979 Releases]][[category:Historical Romance]] | + | [[Category:Category Romance]][[category:1979 Releases]][[category:Historical Romance]][[Category:Native American - Historical]] |
* '''Author''': [[Belinda Grey]] | * '''Author''': [[Belinda Grey]] | ||
* '''Publisher''': [[Mills and Boon]], [[Mills and Boon Historical Romance 1 - 100|Masquerade #0047]] | * '''Publisher''': [[Mills and Boon]], [[Mills and Boon Historical Romance 1 - 100|Masquerade #0047]] | ||
* '''Year''': 1979 | * '''Year''': 1979 | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Book Description== | ||
She was no longer Miss Deborah Jones. Now they called her Laughing Flame. Gone was the naive English girl, with the white skin and bright red hair, a girl who knew nothing of life or love. In her place was a strong Navajo woman dressed in buckskins and standing by her man - the half-breed Navajo scout, Adam-Leap-the-Mountain. Deborah never looked back. She would have done anything for her adopted people; for he wild and brave husband she would have broken her heart ... and she very nearly did. | She was no longer Miss Deborah Jones. Now they called her Laughing Flame. Gone was the naive English girl, with the white skin and bright red hair, a girl who knew nothing of life or love. In her place was a strong Navajo woman dressed in buckskins and standing by her man - the half-breed Navajo scout, Adam-Leap-the-Mountain. Deborah never looked back. She would have done anything for her adopted people; for he wild and brave husband she would have broken her heart ... and she very nearly did. |
Revision as of 02:51, 14 October 2007
- Author: Belinda Grey
- Publisher: Mills and Boon, Masquerade #0047
- Year: 1979
Book Description
She was no longer Miss Deborah Jones. Now they called her Laughing Flame. Gone was the naive English girl, with the white skin and bright red hair, a girl who knew nothing of life or love. In her place was a strong Navajo woman dressed in buckskins and standing by her man - the half-breed Navajo scout, Adam-Leap-the-Mountain. Deborah never looked back. She would have done anything for her adopted people; for he wild and brave husband she would have broken her heart ... and she very nearly did.