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Posted:04-28-2010
Language:Japanese
Mistress for a Weekend

Mistress for a Weekend

Publisher: Harlequin Enterprises, Ltd.

Published on: 09/01/2006

Print ISBN: 9780373125692

Imprint: Harlequin Presents

By: Susan Napier

Available Formats: PDF
Requires: Adobe Digital Editions Download
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Description

Nora Lang needs the most dangerous man she can find!Enter tycoon Blake MacLeod. He normally prefers sophisticated blondes that don't require too much of his brainpower. But Nora's a challenge... The perfect opportunity for a little light relief. Until she acquires some important information that he can't risk being leaked.Now Blake has to make sure Nora doesn't leave his sight--he'll make love to her for a whole weekend!
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Susan Napier (Author)

Susan Napier was born (appropriately, for a romance writer) February 14, St. Valentine's Day, in Auckland, New Zealand. She was 11 years old when her first story was published — on the children's page of a daily newspaper — and from that time on she was a confirmed scribbler. By the time she graduated from high school she was determined to make writing her full-time career.Her first job was as a reporter at the Auckland Star, the city's leading evening newspaper. It was there that she met her archetypal hero, the newspaper's tall, dark, and handsome chief reporter, Englishman Tony Potter. In the best traditions for romance, Susan and Tony fell in love, married, and have raised two sons, Simon and Ben, both of whom are now studying at university in Auckland.After her marriage Susan left the newspaper to work for several years as a script writer/researcher/production assistant for a film company, and it is there that she learned the craft of writing dialogue, so essential for a successful novelist. After her sons were born she worked as a freelance documentary scriptwriter before deciding that it was time to try her hand at writing the kind of fiction that she enjoyed reading.It took Susan nearly two years to finish her first manuscript, which was accepted by Mills & Boon in London after an extensive rewrite, which took almost another year. By the time Sweet Vixen was published in 1983 she had had a second book accepted, and was working on a third. The year 2000 saw her 30th book published by Harlequin Mills & Boon.Susan and Tony still live in the house they bought soon after their marriage, next to a nature reserve in a leafy suburb of Auckland. However, extensive renovations have provided for their expanding lives, including a book-crammed office for Susan, sprawling living quarters and a large, solar-heated, saltwater pool in a sunny, paved courtyard.Tony now works for a national Sunday newspaper and retains his hero status in her life, serving as a constant source
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