Cover of Let it Snow

Let it Snow

by Beth Moran (Novelist), Lauren Myracle, Maureen Johnson, Mariana Kohnert

367 pages2022Boldwood BooksISBN 9781802806441
BUSINESS & ECONOMICSCareersInterviewingFAMILY & RELATIONSHIPSConflict ResolutionDivorce & SeparationFriendshipLove & RomanceMarriage & Long-Term RelationshipsDatingFICTIONRomanceSuspenseRomantic ComedyClean & WholesomeHolidayComing of AgeWomenFamily LifeMarriage & DivorceSiblingsMashupsHolidaysSmall Town & RuralFeministNature & the EnvironmentTRAVELEuropeGreat BritainFood, Lodging & TransportationRoad Travel

About this book

After the end of a long-term relationship, local weather girl Bea Armstrong has been avoiding her family, and their inevitable 'I-told-you-sos.' But with Christmas fast approaching, she is finally on her way home to Charis House, the school in Sherwood Forest that her mum and dad run in their old family home. And to top it all off, the insufferable Henry Fairfax - who her parents have always wanted her to marry - has also been invited. Relief comes in the shape of a last minute interview for her dream job. There are just a few minor problems... the interview is in Scotland, Bea has no car, and the snow is falling already. The only solution is for Henry to drive her - could this Christmas get any worse... But during an unforgettable two day interview, a stay in a log cabin and a nightmare journey through the snow, Henry turns out to be nothing like she thought. And when Bea's first love and recent ex shows up, Bea has a difficult choice to make...

Publication Details

Publisher
Boldwood Books
Published
2022
Pages
367
ISBN
9781802806441
Language
en

About Beth Moran (Novelist)

John Green's first novel, Looking for Alaska, won the 2006 Michael L. Printz Award presented by the American Library Association. His second novel, An Abundance of Katherines, was a 2007 Michael L. Printz Award Honor Book and a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. His next novel, Paper Towns, is a New York Times bestseller and won the Edgar Allen Poe Award for Best YA Mystery. Starting in 2007, John and his brother Hank were the hosts of a popular internet blog, "Brotherhood 2.0," (aka [vlogbrothers](https://www.youtube.com/@vlogbrothers)) where they discussed their lives, books and current events every day for a year except for weekends and holidays.

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