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ePub One Fine Day download

by Theresa Weir

ePub One Fine Day download
Author:
Theresa Weir
ISBN13:
978-0553563788
ISBN:
0553563785
Language:
Publisher:
Fanfare (January 1, 1994)
Category:
Subcategory:
Contemporary
ePub file:
1328 kb
Fb2 file:
1412 kb
Other formats:
azw docx lit mobi
Rating:
4.9
Votes:
424

I love this author and appreciate her unbelievable talent and creativity. One Fine Day is one that I won't forget, and probably need to read again.

I love this author and appreciate her unbelievable talent and creativity. It is layered with complexity of emotions, motivations, and relationships.

One Fine Day. Weir Theresa.

Weir's product description says she wrote it when publishers were experimenting with books that crossed women's fiction with romance, and this was an attempt to do that

Weir's product description says she wrote it when publishers were experimenting with books that crossed women's fiction with romance, and this was an attempt to do that.

Anne Frasier (born c. 1950s) is a pseudonym for Theresa Weir. Theresa Weir) is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of twenty-five books and numerous short stories that have spanned the genres of suspense, mystery, thriller, romantic suspense, paranormal, fantasy, and memoir

Years after she leaves her husband, Austin, for a new life, tragedy calls her back to his side, and both she and Austin get a second chance at love.

Years after she leaves her husband, Austin, for a new life, tragedy calls her back to his side, and both she and Austin get a second chance at love. Years after she leaves her husband, Austin, for a new life, tragedy calls her back to his side, and both she and Austin get a second chance at love. (1994) A novel by Theresa Weir. This is the second of two books. The first is Forever (Forever Young), but One Fine Day easily stands alone. com bestselling author about the book: Women's fiction reissue. During the early nineties, romance publishers were experimenting with hybrids, books that were a combination of romance and women's fiction. One Fine Day was one of those books.

Читать бесплатно The Martian Andy Weir. Текст этой книги доступен онлайн: ferent form, as an ebook in 2011.

Limbaugh and Stephenson Family & Implant Dentistry.

Books by Theresa Weir. lives on an apple, cattle and sheep farm in Illinois, not far from the Mississippi River. Yesterday was the day you were supposed to release my homing pigeons. Jason and I waited all afternoon. She was a 1988 Romance Writers of America Golden Medallion finalist for her first book, The Forever Man, a Silhouette Romance.

One fine day in April, Francois, with whom of late fortune hadquarreled, was seated in the sun on a bench in the now ill-tended gardenof the Luxembourg

One fine day in April, Francois, with whom of late fortune hadquarreled, was seated in the sun on a bench in the now ill-tended gardenof the Luxembourg. The self-made difficulties of the country wereaffecting more and more the business of the honest, and of thatuncertain guild which borrows but never returns. Thou hast not my close experience of the lantern, and stone wallsfor a home I like not. Work, thou sayest? Too late; there is work forno one nowadays. Thou wilt end badly, little monster. Toto whined, and having no more to say, fell asleep.

Years after she leaves her husband, Austin, for a new life, tragedy calls her back to his side, and both she and Austin get a second chance at love. Original.
  • For only being 302 pages, this one will haunt you. I love this author and appreciate her unbelievable talent and creativity. One Fine Day is one that I won't forget, and probably need to read again. It is layered with complexity of emotions, motivations, and relationships. It isn't my favorite of this author's work because, (I have to be honest), it's very dark.

    Austin Bennett and his sister Gabrielle were raised by an abusive father. Both have serious intimacy and attachment issues. Weir delves into the middle of each of their existences in this multi-layered novel.

    Austin's story focuses on his tumultuous marriage and most recently his separation from his estranged wife Molly. Austin has a debilitating stroke at the start of the book which compels Molly to come back into his life as a temporary caregiver. I didn't sense much love lost on Molly's part, but Austin's love for Molly is much more apparent. Austin's lack of ability to communicate, show, and trust love is apparent in their interactions. Molly also has her own emotional baggage that she carried into the marriage, and the wounds Austin has left on her in the aftermath of their hurtful marriage are noticeable. Weir almost waits to long to begin the "healing" process for this couple. Their love story comes late, but is very touching and emotional.

    Gabrielle is not so lucky. Her life as a stripper has "stripped" her of so much. The wounds this woman carries were tough to swallow. This book is "REAL" in the sense that not all stories have happy endings. I found myself wanting one for Gabrielle, but painful pasts take time to heal...and some never do.

    This is NOT a fun, whimsical, romantic fairy tale. It's title hints at something like that, but do not be fooled. These are some wounded people who hurt themselves, and others, out of pure instincts to survive. It's a tough read emotionally and one that "takes a lot out of the reader". I recommend it, don't get me wrong, but be aware of what's in store for you.

  • Sad but so so good. Q broken marriage because two people loved but didn't communicate. Molly lived in the past, with her dead boyfriend, and Austin had too much pride, too much fear of looking weak or like a failure. So he was cruel with her, and she was submissive and distant. She left him and one year later her daughter calls that her Austin had a stroke. She comes back to assist, and this bittersweet story begins. You can't help but feel compassion for both. Austin loved her with all his heart, but his pride got in the way. Molly could have loved him if he had been different, but as it was, she kept moving away from him when he angered. I didn't see how it could be fixed because both were the shut down type, but the writer did a great job. The biggest change about was Austin; his stroke made him weak physically, but eventually it made him strong, able to see what he was too blind to see before. Great read!

  • Wow. The story of Molly Thoreau Bennett and her not-so-perfect husband Austin drained me but in a good way. I rated it five stars because Ms. Weir did a super job at letting me, the reader, take a peek at a marriage gone wrong. The second book in a two part series it can be read alone but it helps if you read FOREVER first. In that book you'll view a man who niggles his wife.

    Austin Bennett never saw it coming. He thought his criticisms were justified. He was helping her, right? He knew she could become distant but she had been like this for so long.

    Like so many spouses he was clueless. So when he came home one day from work and found the house silent, his wife gone and a letter from her asking for a divorce, he was shocked. Then anger took its place and it fed him. He would show her. She'd be back and he would let her know he moved on but that didn't happen. And then he did the unimaginable, he suffered a stroke.

    This is the story of a couple who once loved each other. Like so many marriages, communication broke down. Resentment simmered below the surface. Fortunately for this couple they were forced together because of circumstances beyond their control. They learned of each other's strengths and weaknesses, something both took for granted.

    By the end of the book I had reversed my feelings toward Austin. Molly had her flaws, too. I thought I was taken through the wringer and I was consumed with different perceptions. This book is a 'deep thinker'. Not everyone will like it. More a fiction than romance I still am glad I read it but then I enjoy Ms. Weir's style of writing. If you are tired of the same-old fluff and are interested in reading something intense try ONE FINE DAY but don't say I didn't warn you.

  • Ok found this free book on my Kindle decided to give it a go after I viewed a couple of the reviews online. It was a quick read but kind of disturbing to me.
    Molly and Austin were older characters with grown daughter that is married with a child of her own.
    It is an OK book I just found it hard to feel for these 2 main characters. Austin was a harsh powerful man that seemed to like using his power over his wife all the time not really loving her. Molly seemed scared of her husband which is sad to be trapped in such a turbulent relationship where you don't feel anything. Molly has left him as the book opens and leaves a note. One year later her daughter calls to say dad had a stroke. Molly returns to help nurse him since they are not divorced. Their relationship at this point bothers me and I don't know if I liked the ending, whether it is believable. I just don't know.

  • The book is ok...meaning it's not great and it's not terrible, if that helps at all! It is not a light comedy as others have mentioned, but it is written fairly articulately and the story moves along. There is some concerning content (the husband's treatment towards sex while they were married borders on rape) and the other sex scenes were unnecessarily graphic, but that always turn me off a book anyways. I give it a "meh" - it was a cheap download, got my moneys worth, have already forgotten it and moved on. I would not recommend if it's more than a buck to buy.