3 Novels by Judith Arnold
Requirements: ePUB Reader, 3.6 MB
Overview: Barbara Keiler was born on 7 April 1946 in New York, USA. She started telling stories before she could write. She was four when her sister, Carolyn, stuffed a crayon into her hand and taught her the alphabet, and she’s been writing ever since. She is a graduate of Smith College, where she learned to aim for the stars, and she received a master’s degree in creative writing from Brown University, where she took aim at a good-looking graduate student in the chemistry department and wound up marrying him.
Genre: Contemporary Romance
One Good Turn
SHE’D SAVED HIS LIFE
One summer in Washington, a wide-eyed optimist named Jenny Perrin had shown Luke Benning how easy it was to believe in yourself, how good it felt to pursue your dreams, how perfect love could be.
Luke never knew why she’d disappeared from his life or where she’d gone. But he hadn’t forgotten the lessons Jenny had taught him, nor the trusting, sunny young woman she’d been. Which was why Jenny shocked him now, years after he’d lost hope of finding her again.
Jenny was lovely, successful . . . and dying inside. It was Luke’s turn to save a life.
Safe Harbor
THEY’D ALWAYS BE THE BEST OF FRIENDS
When it came to things that made summer special, Block Island was right up there with sea breezes and honeysuckle. And, for Shelley Ballard, so was Kip Stroud.
When Shelley and Kip were seven they tramped through the sand dunes and explored hidden coves. And Shelley called Kip "friend."
When they were fifteen, they talked about sex and practiced French kissing. And Shelley called him a "man."
When she was twenty-seven, they talked about the old days and, in a moment of abandon, created a new life.. . . And Shelley called him the "father of her baby."
Now, at thirty, they set up a household together on their precious Block Island and raise their son.. . . But can Shelley ever call him "husband"?
The April Tree
Reach out, hold tight, stand up, move forward.
Learning that life goes on is the hardest lesson of all.
One life destroyed. Four others irrevocably shattered. Overcoming the shock and grief of death is an all-too-familiar rite of young adulthood.
Walking home from a tennis game on a bright spring day, April Walden’s three closest friends watch in horror as she is struck by a car and killed. The senseless accident plunges all three young women-and the car’s driver-into a devastating and often misguided search for comfort, purpose, and inspiration.
Becky wraps herself in a protective cloak of obsessions, performing anxious rituals at the base of the red maple tree under which April died. Elyse dives into a high-risk party life, trying to honor April by experiencing everything April missed but mistaking self-destructive indulgence for courage. Florie turns to fundamentalist Christianity, not as spiritual guidance, but as a wall that might shield her from reality. Mark, the driver, spirals downward into substance abuse and self-loathing, until April’s three friends reach out to save him.
How do you make it through the night when you’ve stopped believing that tomorrow always comes?
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