Cover of The best man and the bridesmaid

The best man and the bridesmaid

by Unknown Author

5.0
(1 ratings)
285 pages2000Mills & BoonISBN 9780263166859

About this book

Yancie's new job as driver to leading industrialist Thomson Wakefield is a challenge. Yet Yancie knows that her boss is a man with whom she could fall in love. Love for Yancie means getting married -- does it mean the same to Thomson? It takes a near-tragic accident to give Yancie her answer -- Thomson pops the question from his hospital bed. Can Yancie trust the proposal of a man under heavy sedation?

Publication Details

Publisher
Mills & Boon
Published
2000
Pages
285
ISBN
9780263166859

About Unknown Author

Liz Fielding was born on 1th June in a small country town in Berkshire, England, UK. She has been reading since she was knee-high to a gnat. Her mother taught her, the way her mother taught her all the good things in life. Her mother read to her when she was little and then her mother bought her books of her own. Little Women, What Katy Did and Anne of Green Gables. She read them all until the covers fell off. Liz was a secretary and she met John, an engineer, while they were both working in Lusaka, Zambia. They married and had travelled the world together before settling down to raise their family. When Ami, their first kid was born, her husband given her pearl earrings, made from pearls fished from the Bahrain pearl beds by her own husband. Later, they had other kid, Wil. She started writing when her children were small and her husband was working abroad. In 1982 was published her first romance, An Image of You,, was set in Kenya, in a place she knew well, and was plucked from the slush pile because the feisty feminist heroine made her editor laugh. Emotion touched with humor has been the hallmark of her books ever since. Liz lives in the house built by her husband in Wales, near Caermyrddyn, Merlin's Fort. The land is steeped in legend, the hilltops crowned with the remains of ancient castles. She lives in a tiny village that she loves and rarely leaves, keeping in touch with readers and friends through the magic of the Internet. In 2005, when she was nominated for a RITA Award from the Romance Writers of America, she made an exception and flew to Washington for the Romance Writers of America conference, where she had a great time playing tourist as well as meeting up with lots of old friends.

Track your reading journey with BookOwl