Download 3 Books by Mary Burchell (.ePUB)

3 Books by Mary Burchell (aka Ida Cook)
Requirements: EPUB Reader, 726 KB , SCANNED COPY
Overview: Ida Cook (aka Mary Burchell) was born on 1904 at 37 Croft Avenue, Sunderland, England. With her eldest sister Mary Louise Cook (1901), she attending the Duchess’ School in Alnwick. Later the sisters took civil service jobs in London, and developed a passionate interest in opera. The sisters helped 29 jews to escape from the Nazis, funded mainly by Ida’s writing.
Genre: Contemporary Romance

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Then Come Kiss Me: When Marina became engaged to the most eligible bachelor in the neighbourhood, it was a purely temporary affair, arranged to suit theirmutual convenience. It was unfortunate, then, that Marina should discover that she was in love with Nicholas at the precise moment that he decided that it was time for the engagement to come to an end.

House of Conflict: Alison and her cousin Lorna felt they had been very lucky to land themselves pleasant jobs as housekeepers to elderly Mrs. Storey and her family, in a beautiful house in the Lake District. Alison in particular hoped that now she might be able to trace Colin Marriott, who had walked so suddenly and mysteriously out of her life but whom she knew to be living somewhere nearby. Find him she did, but to her mortification Colin explained–quite kindly, however!–that Alison was wasting her time in thinking of him seriously, and then proceeded to fall in love with Lorna. But Alison had things other than Colic to worry about now, for she had gradually realized that not all the Storey family were as agreeable as they had at first seemed – and that, in one of them, she had made a dangerous enemy.

Yet Love Remains : He didn’t believe that she loved him.
Helen had always been fond of her friend Sylvia, and she felt an enormous debt of gratitude towards Sylvia’s mother–so she had always felt obliged to keep a protective eye on her friend, so much less self-reliant than Helen and so apt to land herself in impossible situations.

When Sylvia found herself trapped in a disastrous marriage to an impossible man — the famous playwright Charles Lane, who according to Sylvia was selfish, tyrannical, conceited and unfaithful–it was to Helen that she turned. She persuaded Helen to help her out of the situation by tricking Charles into setting her free.

The plot the two girls worked out was fool-proof; it went without a hitch–until the very last moment, when Helen discovered to her horror that Charles Lane, the ‘selfish, tyrannical husband’, was the man with whom she herself had just fallen in love.

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