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That’s when Morgan arrives, having left behind her career as a supermodel, and Ford’s sister takes her on as the face of the company during her vacation. Terrific 40 hour saga which I just finished on audio for the second time this year (first time was in January). Throughout the series, the main character, Amy, finds healing along with the horses that she treats.
Coming Home by Rosamunde Pilcher | Goodreads
I hate how they look like sappy romance novels because somebody put dorky flowers and curlicues all over the cover, but rest assured, they're far from that genre. Other works include Sleeping Tiger (1967), The End of the Summer (1971), Wild Mountain Thyme (1979), and Voices in Summer (1982). At the star of this novel, I was rather fascinated by the relationship between Judith and her mother, who seems to be a push-over, but at the same time capable of some deep thoughts.I had never read Rosamunde Pilcher before, but I’ve already started another audiobook of hers, also narrated by Helen Johns. She has degrees in dramatic art and English literature, and harboured dreams of joining the Royal Shakespeare Company until she realised that it was words she loved more than performing. Finally, after a lot of long walks and Cornish cream teas, WW II begins, and the beautiful young men who decorated the lawns of Nancherrow are wounded, taken prisoner, or killed. Her father has been living overseas in Singapore and her mum and little sister will soon be joining him. The Kesh use technological inventions of civilization such as writing, steel, guns, electricity, trains, and a computer network (see below).
Coming Home: An uplifting feel good novel with family secrets Coming Home: An uplifting feel good novel with family secrets
Nora had raised Jess after Polly, Nora's daughter and Jess’s mother, left for Brisbane when Jess was only ten years old. Finding it hard to trust, Ford protects himself, but slowly he begins to let his guard down, as he and Morgan begin to find each other.I mean they're parts of this novel that are quite ridiculous, badly written and silly, but there is still warmth to it and something universal that I can't quite describe.