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  • Weale, Anne; Armstrong, Juliet; Seale, Sara

    Published by Harlequin Books, Don Mills, ON, Canada, 1974

    Seller: Mirror Image Book, Sacramento, CA, U.S.A.

    Seller Rating: 5-star rating, Learn more about seller ratings

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    Hardcover. Condition: Very Good Plus. First Printing. This Golden Harlequin Library hardback romance anthology Volumne XLIV (44), printed March 1974 contains the Anne Weale romance -THE HOUSE OF SEVEN FOUNTAINS [Harlequin Romance # 553, 1960], as well as, NURSE IN INDIA by Juliet Armstrong [HR# 689, 1962], & THE GENTLE PRISONER by Sara Seale [HR#645, 1962]. A Glossy metalic gold leatherette, hardcover with navy lettering, 7 inch by 4.25 inch. Condition is very good plus. Bottom corners and spine ends bumped, some edge wear. Pages tight and clean with light tanning, crease across tip of top of front end page, a nice looking book.**.*We have other titles in this genre in stock and give discounts in shipping on additional books sent in the same package, please contact us for more info.**.WRAPPED IN PLASTIC BAG TO PROTECT CONDITION OF BOOK.Summary - THE HOUSE OF SEVEN FOUNTAINS - The air journey from England to Malaya takes rather more than three days and nights. During that flight Vivian sat next to a tall, handsome doctor - and her hardly spoke to her except to put her markedly in the wrong in an annoying incident in Rangoon. So she more surprised than please when met him again at the House of Seven fountains that had been left to her by her godfather.NURSE IN INDIA - Can one bury the past? Put it behind one forever? Nurse Stella Hantley, traveling in India as secretary-nurse to kind Miss Jellings, would have answered "Yes" to that question. She found it hard to believe that she had ever danced on the stage and dreamed of becoming a star; and the episode which had shattered her career was little more than a shadowy memory. She was safe now and could reach out to take the happiness which Roger Fendish, she knew, was on the point of offering her -- and then Allegra, lovely and treacherous, came suddenly back into her life, seeking for a second time to rob her of all she valued.THE GENTLE PRISONER - There was a curious similarity between the fairy tale of "Beauty and the Beast" and Shelley Wynthorpe's relationship with Nicholas Penryn. The Beast lived in a remote house, surrounded by high walls; so did Nicholas. Beauty's father brought her a white rose from the Beast's garden; so did Shelley's father, when he visited Nicholas and they came to their strange arrangement that Shelley should become Nicholas's wife. The Beast was hideously ugly -- and Nicholas, badly scarred, was convinced that no woman could ever feel anything but revulsion for him. But. . after a year and a day, Beauty had fallen truly in love with the Beast. Would Shelley, with her gentle ways, be able to bring her own love story to its happy ending?.