Journeys Through England in Particular: On Foot
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Drawn from the critically acclaimed England In Particular, this delightful book pairs with Journeys...
Queen Camilia
Book
From the back cover: 'What if being royal was a crime? The UK has come over all republican....
Fiction Royal Family Sue Townsend Political Humour
The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 3/4
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Re-issued with the charming original artwork from 1982, The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 3/4...
The Lost Continent: Travels In Small Town America
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Hardly anyone ever leaves Des Moines, Iowa. But Bill Bryson did, and after 10 years in England he...
Travel comedy
The Senator's Wife
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Once again Sue Miller takes us deep into the private lives of women with this mesmerizing portrait...
Deborah (162 KP) rated A Lady Never Tells (Willowmere, #1) in Books
Dec 21, 2018
This is the first book in said series and although I didn't actively dislike it, I did find it a bit mediocre. A lot of plot elements seemed very reused and I always find the 'American girls coming over to England and catching eligible aristocratic batchelor' a bit too Mary-Sue-ish.
I didn't find it easy to like the heroine in this book all that much and it was difficult to see quite why the hero (who was likeable) would fall in love with her. Mary (or Marigold!) brings her sister to England to find their English family after their mother dies and they want to escape a somewhat unpleasant stepfather, but after this they all, but Mary in particular, do some pretty silly things. OK, they may not be up on British aristocratic ettiquette, but they seem to loose all common sense sometimes! Mary deliberately decides to conceal some important information and they go off on a jaunt whenever they feel like it, despite being attacked and suffering attempted abductions, and they seem to think it is unreasonable that the gentlemen taking responsibility for them want to try and stop them exposing themselves to danger!
Hopefully the next two books will be better.
Where am I?: My Autobiography
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When Phil Tufnell hung up his cricket boots back in 2003, little did he know the dramatic direction...