Difference between revisions of "Dear Lover England"

From Romance Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(add author, year, categories)
(+cat, minor formatting)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Category:Category Romance]][[category:1978 Releases]][[category:Historical Romance]]
+
[[Category:Category Romance]][[category:1978 Releases]][[category:Historical Romance]][[Category:Elizabethan]]
 
* '''Author''': [[Pamela Bennetts]]
 
* '''Author''': [[Pamela Bennetts]]
 
* '''Publisher''': [[Mills and Boon]], [[Mills and Boon Historical Romance 1 - 100|Masquerade #0022]]
 
* '''Publisher''': [[Mills and Boon]], [[Mills and Boon Historical Romance 1 - 100|Masquerade #0022]]
 
* '''Year''': 1978
 
* '''Year''': 1978
 +
 +
==Book Description==
 
"Many women marry and live in torment ...  "...or do not live at all!" An uncomfortable silence fell at the young queen's pronouncement. Everyone knew what she was thinking. Her own mother, the bewitching Anne Boleyn, had paid for her love with death. Elizabeth was not about to meet a similar horrible fate. So while her courtiers buzzed with suggestions that she marry this prince or that king, the queen remained unmoved.  For her heart had already been given to a very special lover, and to this lover she would dedicate her entire being....
 
"Many women marry and live in torment ...  "...or do not live at all!" An uncomfortable silence fell at the young queen's pronouncement. Everyone knew what she was thinking. Her own mother, the bewitching Anne Boleyn, had paid for her love with death. Elizabeth was not about to meet a similar horrible fate. So while her courtiers buzzed with suggestions that she marry this prince or that king, the queen remained unmoved.  For her heart had already been given to a very special lover, and to this lover she would dedicate her entire being....

Revision as of 19:57, 14 December 2007

Book Description

"Many women marry and live in torment ... "...or do not live at all!" An uncomfortable silence fell at the young queen's pronouncement. Everyone knew what she was thinking. Her own mother, the bewitching Anne Boleyn, had paid for her love with death. Elizabeth was not about to meet a similar horrible fate. So while her courtiers buzzed with suggestions that she marry this prince or that king, the queen remained unmoved. For her heart had already been given to a very special lover, and to this lover she would dedicate her entire being....