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HELP!! What's That Book Again??

This book opens shortly after WWII; an Israeli settler turns wasteland into fertile farmland as an Arab looks on. He sold the "worthless" land to the settler, but has seller's remorse triggered by the settler's success.
My first guess was Leon Uris's "Exodus," but I think that's a dry hole.
Ideas?

This book opens shortly after WWII; an Israeli settler turns wasteland into fertile farmland as an Arab looks on. He sold the "worthless" land to the settler, but has ..."
Leon Uris' The Haj? If I remember correctly, there was a lot of that sort of going on in The Haj (wasteland sold to Israelis, who make good of it, and the Arabs getting jealous).




Turns out we found the title to this one, which turned out not to be fiction after all. So no need to reply.



This book opens shortly after WWII; an Israeli settler turns wasteland into fertile farmland as an Arab looks on. He sold the "worthless" land to the settler, but has ..."
It doesn't sound like Exodus although the native born Israeli has an Arab man he considers his best friend in Exodus.
It might be Harvest by Gloria Goldreich, if I remember correctly.

Kitchens of the Great Midwest


I don't know that book, but I did just finish

I read the authors you mentioned voraciously when I was younger, and I don't recall such a scene. Sorry I couldn't be of more help.

Does this ring a bell with anyone? I'd love to read them again but just cannot trace them anywhere.


The protagonist is a French (noble?)man, and it's written mostly from his point of view. He gets into some trouble back home and is forced to leave, so he flees to the Louisiana area. I believe the time period may be during French control of the region, so colonial times.
When he gets there, he starts working his own farm/plantation. He's a pretty upright guy and is a sympathetic hero. I'm not certain about the love interests, but I know he has at least 2, maybe 3 wives throughout the story, but they all die. One of the wives is a native american woman.
At some point he has a son, and the son is a bit of a bad seed. I believe the last wife dies from childbirth. In the later part of the book he takes his son to a brothel in town, and his son ends up hurting one of the girls there.
For the life of me, I can't remember how the book ends, which is one of the reasons I want to find it so badly. Any help would be greatly appreciated!


Just did a quick search and found these 2 sites that you can look at to see if you find them there.
http://www.scottishromance.com/
http://www.paperbackswap.com/Scottish...


I think it is a series and it is set in the regency era. It is about the third of three sisters who own a gentleman club. The elder sisters are already married. In comes a Duke who already made a wager at another club (White's, I think) that this young lady will never marry only for him to start spending time with her and well, we can all guess how the rest goes.
And the Duke's bet turned out to be a pittance and which he paid up on his wedding day (I think) with his wife at his side much to the dismay of a butler who insists a lady can't be in the club.
I have tried finding this book, but I don't even have an inclination of the title. Just the plot summary.
I would appreciate it if someone can help me find this book.

Can it be ((A Duchess to Remember)) by Christina Brooke (2012) ?it is in series ((Ministry of Marriage))

I read the book either in 2009 or 2010.
I don't know when it was written but I can guess that is is before 2006.





I read this book way back in 2011 or 2012, and it was set in probably medieval times. There's a young girl whose family sells her to their liege lord because they are destitute. She works as a weaver for his wife. While doing so she discovers a plot of an unsavoury villain to put himself on the throne and falls in love with a stable thing. I thought this novel was awesome back then, and I'd really like to read it again, only I conveniently do not remember the author or title. :/

To me it sounds The Heirs of the Kingdom by Zoe Oldenbourg

Edited to add: It's In the Hands of the Living God by Newfoundland author Lillian Bouzane.
QUERY CLOSED

Setting: WWII, in a big city in England (I think Birmingham, might be London or somewhere else)
Main Character: A young woman (I forget her name) who is training to be a nurse. I think she's Irish/of Irish heritage, but other than a quick visit, the book does not take place in Ireland. If I recall the cover correctly, she has auburn hair.
The book starts when she starts nurse training. There are several young women in her dorm, one of whom becomes her best friend. I ~think~ the best friend's name is Elsie.
Elsie's cousin, Paul (he is definitely called Paul) is one of the doctors at the hospital where they all work. The student nurses are not allowed to date the doctors, but the main character and Paul fall in love and get married -- she gets out of trouble over it when they announce their engagement by explaining that it's Elsie's cousin, that they have been socialising in a group, that even the first time they saw each other by themselves it wasn't a date, and that they continued getting better acquainted in a group setting until they realised love had snuck up on them and they wanted to get married.
Paul's family are well off but he doesn't get on with them very well. Elsie's father owns a department store. Elsie gets married to Paul's best mate around the same time, and the four of them move into a big house with two sitting rooms. Elsie's father told her to choose all her furniture out of the shop as her wedding present, and Paul's parents match the offer, but Paul doesn't want to accept, until Elsie's guy points out that it's hardly fair on the heroine to move into a house with them and they have all new furniture and Paul+wife are scratching by with the bare bones of second hand stuff, and Paul relents.
It's also quite a big plot point that they are Catholics, but they decide they will go ahead and use condoms anyway because she doesn't want to stop working. Until he has a big row with his family and forgets to buy any.
The guys have been called up for service, and the above happens the day before he leaves for war. She gets pregnant but he doesn't get to meet his daughter. He is killed in action. At some point a massive bomb falls on the hospital and half of it is blown away -- two of the other roommates the nurses had in the beginning were killed.
The main character eventually meets and marries someone else, but there's a big hoo-hah because he's a protestant. But her mother says that Catholic or protestant isn't the main thing, whether or not he is a good man is the main thing, and references her own marriage to a (Catholic) violent drunk for a contrast, so she goes ahead. This is the bit when she goes to Ireland. She and new hubby have a son, daughter is probably five years old by now, and the war is over and everyone is picking up the pieces.
SPOILER!!
Paul comes back, turned out he hadn't died he was just seriously injured, but he had been taken prisoner of war, and his hair has all turned white. He's grumpy as sin and throws the new husband out of the house, and wants to throw the son out too, but the main character won't let him, and everything is very difficult all round.
MORE SPOILERS!!
Paul dies within a year or so of getting back and leaves letters with the solicitor to pass on afterwards; the last, several months later, tells her to find love again and the solicitor tracks down hubby#2 and they get married again and they all live happily ever after.


Thank you
Katie wrote: "I'm searching for a book I bought in a sale at the library around 10 years or so ago. Lent/gave it to my Mum and I think she's gotten rid of it, but she doesn't recall even reading it; I've been wa..."
Sorry...i dont know the name of this book...but if you find out please tell me! Its sounds amazing!
Sorry...i dont know the name of this book...but if you find out please tell me! Its sounds amazing!

Georgette Heyer's


Well, there's always Diana Gabaldon's Outlander series.

Thank you sooo much! I will look this one up right away. Only 8 more to find! I didn't think this would be hard!!


Annette, I'm stumped, but you might try here:
http://whatwasthatbook.livejournal.com/


Don't know but I want to read it. Sounds good.

I'm trying to track down a book which I previously had in my bookcase, and which I've realised must have been chucked out.
Potential title: Letters, Night, Desire (??) (I've tried googling without success).
Publish date: Possibly 2002-2003. The version I had was a galley proof. In the novel storyline, I've included spoilers.
HF Era: Late 18thc-19th c
Location: North America
Paperback: Note, I had the galley proof, not the final published version.
Dust jacket illustration: Blue book cover - shades of blue and white with an illustration of woman with dark hair styled in a low bun, wearing 18/19thc garb, some kind of white corsety/top thing and long dress.
Main character: Female, possibly Nora, Louisa or Rosetta.
Novel structure: First person narrative, interspersed with letters written to/from the main character, from a man.
SPOILERS FOLLOW
Story line: 'Nora' is a frustrated teacher or governess who has to travel across country Northern America. The story is partly told through dramatic narrative and partly through use of letters/diary entries in which she is writing to/from her beau/lover/friend (I can't remember which). For the majority of the novel, their correspondence makes you wonder if they'll ever meet up again or if they will be thwarted by tough circumstances. Very good literary writing style, not pulp fiction at all.
The character development is really about her experience of traveling across country and facing dangers as a woman alone, negotiating with people coming across her path. In the latter third of the book, she meets up with her lover/friend/beau and they have a dangerous moment where guns are fired but they survive even though he is seriously wounded. The fact there are guns makes me think the era the novel is set could be quite wide (I can't remember if it was a rifle or 12-gauge or a reloading or musket. I suspect it was a reload, not a musket fire). However, the gun used wasn't a pistol, because they needed something suitable for hunting.
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:=) "
True story, I had a hard time sleeping last night trying to think of it.