Download 7 Novels by Jon Rance (.ePUB)

7 Novels by Jon Rance
Requirements: .ePUB Reader, 1.8 MB
Overview: I’m the author of ten novels, with my latest being ONE LIE, a gripping family drama that will keep you hooked until the final heart-stopping moment. My first book, THIS THIRTYSOMETHING LIFE, was published in 2013 by Hodder and Stoughton. Since then I have written comedic dramas about love, family, relationships, and all of the messy bits in-between.
Genre: Contemporary Fiction

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This Family Life (2014): Things that might happen during your first year of parenthood:
1. You’ll get covered in a ‘nuclear’ poo.
2. You’ll be convinced your son is talking with a Japanese accent.
3. You’ll worry that when your son waves, it looks like a Nazi salute.

Of course, this might just be Harry Spencer.
Taking up where This Thirtysomething Life left off, Harry Spencer and is wife Emily are back and trying to survive their first year of parenthood. It has its ups and downs (and a few bits in the middle), but along the way they begin to understand the true meaning of family and what it takes to be a parent.

Featuring a hilarious cast of extras including Harry’s father-in-law Derek, who has a unique problem with Scotch, Steve and Fiona, the parents from children’s entertainment hell, and a yoga instructor with a prominent camel-toe. This Family Life is the ultimate comedy for anyone who is a parent, has a parent, or is thinking about becoming one.

Sunday Dinners (2015): Creating a happy family is one thing. Staying that way is an entirely different story.
The Wilde family have always had a roast dinner on Sundays. Greg Wilde made sure of it. Him, his wife, Lizzy, and their three children around the table; for years it was the glue that held them together.

But now with the children all grown up and moving out, and Greg and Lizzy’s marriage facing an uncertain future, their lives are becoming increasingly unstuck. Greg soon begins to realise that creating a happy family is one thing, but staying that way is an entirely different story.

Told from each of the family’s perspectives at their monthly Sunday roast dinners, this is a bittersweet comedy about parenthood, marriage, love, life and roast dinners.

A Notting Hill Christmas (2015): One family. A tiny flat in Notting Hill. On the biggest day of the year. What could possibly go wrong?

Meet Ben Canterbury, 29, single, lives in a poky flat in Notting Hill with horny Welshman, Rufus. His life has been one disappointment after another. What makes it worse is that his brother, Jamie, is the complete opposite (a Barrister to Ben’s Barista) with a family and a proper house in Twickenham. In an attempt to compete with his perfect brother, Ben insists he hosts the family Christmas, but it isn’t long before he realises he’s way out of his depth.

Ben’s flat isn’t big enough for everyone (including one very angry dog), the Christmas tree’s from the £1 shop, the decorations are hung with Blu-Tack, and the turkey might not fit in the oven. Ben’s definitely not feeling the Christmas spirit. But when beautiful new neighbour, Mhairi McGregor, appears at his door, Ben’s Christmas worries go out of the window and he begins to wonder if it might not be the worst Christmas in history after all.

Amid all the drama, drinking and carnage of Christmas Day, will Ben find true love or will it be another disappointment to add to the list? A Notting Hill Christmas is a brilliantly funny, feel-good, festive novella perfect for fans of romantic comedies like Love Actually and Notting Hill.

About Us (2017): It’s about life. It’s about love. It’s about us.
From the bestselling author of Sunday Dinners and Dan And Nat Got Married, comes a bittersweet comedy about a marriage, about how it begins, how it falls apart, and the choices we’re forced to make.

Rosie Willis isn’t happy. Her once perfect marriage to husband, Pete, is falling apart, her mother is dying, and her three children are starting to feel like strangers. At forty she feels like she’s stuck, but then she meets handsome widower, Mark Hornby, at the school gates and he makes her feel alive again.

As she drifts further from Pete, she gets closer to Mark, but approaching Christmas she realises she needs to try to save her marriage and keep her family together. Despite her feelings, she can’t have an affair. Unfortunately, Pete has news of his own that throws everything into doubt.

Rosie must choose a new life. There’s Pete, Mark, or going it alone. It isn’t easy when you’re forty, when you have three kids, when you feel past it, when your mother is dying, but life isn’t meant to be easy.

The Summer Holidays Survival Guide (2018): Two parents. Three children. One senile grandad. Six weeks. How bad could it possibly be?
For teacher, Ben Robinson, the school summer holidays mean one thing – spending six weeks with his kids. This year, however, he also has his father and one very angry wife to contend with. The name of the game is simple: survive.

Ben embarks on a summer of self-discovery that includes, amongst other things, becoming besotted by a beautiful Australian backpacker, an accidental Brexit march and a road rage attack. There’s also the matter of saving his marriage, which is proving harder than he imagined, mainly due to an unfortunate pyramid scheme and one quite large bottom. But when Ben learns his father has a secret, it takes the whole family on a trip to Scotland that will make or break their summer – and perhaps Ben’s life.

From Jon Rance, bestselling author of Dan And Nat Got Married, comes a comedy about one man, one family, trying to survive the hardest six weeks of the year together.

Good Grief (2019): Two strangers. Two deaths. One unlikely friendship that will change everything.
Holly Moon has it all. The perfect husband, the dream media career, then at age twenty-six her husband dies and her world comes crashing down around her. Black cab driver, Phil Turner, is sixty when his wife dies of cancer. They’ve been married for forty years. He doesn’t know any different.

When Holly and Phil meet at Good Grief support group, they strike up an unlikely friendship. Two strangers with nothing in common except they don’t know how to move on. Perhaps together and with the aid of their ‘definitely not a bucket list’ they’ll find a way. But it’s not as easy as just ticking things off a list and soon their happiness and lives hinge on one thing… each other.

Set in London, Good Grief is a love letter to the healing power of friendship and learning that even in the depths of grief the most magical things can happen.

One Lie (2021): When you have the perfect life, it’s hard to imagine that one lie can take it all away.
Alexander Burke and his wife Olivia are happy. Middle-class and middle-aged, they have everything they ever wanted. A nice house in London and a beautiful teenage daughter. That’s until Alexander makes a decision with catastrophic consequences.

That was ten years ago.
Now Alexander lives unhappily alone and hasn’t seen his daughter since The Incident. One morning, on his way to work, Alexander saves a woman’s life. Perhaps redemption is possible after all. But then again… maybe not.

Written in two time periods ten years apart, One Lie is a drama about the choices we make, the secrets we keep hidden, and how one decision can destroy everything we hold dear.

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