|
|
 |
|
|
Taking The Leap - out now with Moonlit Romance
|
 |
Practice nurse Anya Fraser's adopted son is at the centre of her life. But when her new senior partner, Dr Max Calder arrives at work, distracting her in too many ways, suddenly her anti-relationship mantra isn't working. Max volunteers to help her succeed at the charity parachute jump she's so terrified of and attraction simmers from the off. Taking a leap of faith has never proved so scary nor so attractive -- how will they cope with the challenge of working together and taking to the skies? And resisting a future their pasts taught them to avoid?
Read an excerpt here...
Read Taking The Leap Here
|
|
Shortlisted For The 2007 RNA Joan Hessayon New Writers' Award
|
| |
Here's what the RNA's judges said about Taking The Leap -
Wounded practice nurse learns to trust and hard-bitten thrill-seeking doctor learns to commit under the pressures of a charity parachute jump and a stalker
This is a delightful love story. We both thought that it had a particularly touching and plausible love scene. The medical background is believable drawn and not intrusive. The book has a nice sense of place, all very Scottish and fab scenery. The add-ons were was lovely characterisation of the small boy, and a spine-tingling sense of the horrors of falling out of a plane - made Catherine, the only woman in the Army who refused to Jump, blench at the memory. So that's an A for empathy then.
|
|
|
|
|