When You Wish No charge

When You Wish
By:Bestsellers - Books USA Press
Published on 1997-09-02 by


To thine own wish be true. Do not follow the moth to the star. So says the message in an exquisite green bottle. Is it a wish? A warning? A spell to cast over a lover? In these six charming love stories, a mysterious bottle brings a touch of magic to the lives of all who possess it.... |Wishful Thinking| by Jane Feather. To be taken seriously as a scientist, the bespectacled Rosie Belmont passes herself off as a man...but her plan backfires when a very attractive fellow scientist arrives for an all-too-lengthy visit. |The Blackmoor Devil| by Patricia Coughlin. A legendary rake purchases a spell from a witch...and encounters a love he thought lost forever. |The Natural Child| by Sharon and Tom Curtis. When a proper young lady makes a wish she didn't intend, she soon finds herself trapped in a bedroom with London's wickedest womanizer. |Bewitched| by Elizabeth Elliott. A headstrong lord knows that he must marry a suitable girl, so why is it that only a spirited and highly unsuitable vixen enthralls him? |Forever| by Patricia Potter. A beautiful smuggler is terrified when a mysterious stranger uncovers her family's darkest secret...only to learn fate has a surprise in store for her. |The Unwanted Bride| by Suzanne Robinson. When a dashing earl proposes to a woman he's never seen, he ends up with the wrong bride...and, just maybe, his heart's desire. Six spellbinding stories that are pure magic...from today's most beloved romance authors. Amazon.com Review A mysterious green bottle bearing a hidden message ties together six unforgettable romantic tales. In Jane Feather's Wishful Thinking, Lady Rosalind Belmont wants to be taken seriously as a scientist, but her gender stands in the way. When she purchases an old bottle from a local shop, odd things begin to happen--things that could have serious consequences for her career and her heart. In Patricia Coughlin's The Blackmoor Devil, Christian Lowell suffers from a devilish hex cast by the mother of a young conquest. Desperate for relief, Christian resorts to a folk remedy from a sorceress, and soon after taking it, Christian's life turns upside down The Natural Child is the story of Lucy Hibbert and a wish she never thought could come true. After finding a strange bottle inside a fish, Lucy wishes for a romantic interlude with London's wildest womanizer, Henry Lamb. But when fate throws the two together, Lucy gets more than she bargained for. Elizabeth Elliott's Bewitched transports readers to 19th-century London. Lord James Drake fears the worst when he meets Miss Faro Burke. Bold, beautiful, and--so she claims--clairvoyant, Faro is far too interesting to resist. But when Faro proves her powers by describing a delicate green bottle in James's possession, it is too much for James to accept--or is it? Patricia Potter's Forever finds Holly Hastings fearing for her family's life. Caught smuggling casks of brandy by handsome Justin Talmadge, Holly makes a deal with him in order to save her family--although they're safe from harm, Holly's heart has plenty to fear, for neither Justin nor Holly's lucky glass bottle can save her from love. Finally, in Susan Robinson's The Unwanted Bride, Temple Stirling finds himself betrothed to Melisande Peabody for all the wrong reasons. Can love find a way into the hearts of Temple and Melisande? With the help of an ancient message and a tiny green bottle, anything is possible. From the Inside Flap To thine own wish be true. Do not follow the moth to the star. So says the message in an exquisite green bottle. Is it a wish? A warning? A spell to cast over a lover? In these six charming love stories, a mysterious bottle brings a touch of magic to the lives of all who possess it.... |Wishful Thinking| by Jane Feather. To be taken seriously as a scientist, the bespectacled Rosie Belmont passes herself off as a man...but her plan backfires when a very attractive fellow scientist arrives for an all-too-lengthy visit. |The Blackmoor Devil| by Patricia Coughlin. A legendary rake purchases a spell from a witch...and encounters a love he thought lost forever. |The Natural Child| by Sharon and Tom Curtis. When a proper young lady makes a wish she didn't intend, she soon finds herself trapped in a bedroom with London's wickedest womanizer. |Bewitched| by Elizabeth Elliott. A headstrong lord knows that he must marry a suitable girl, so why is it that only a spirited and highly unsuitable vixen enthralls him? |Forever| by Patricia Potter. A beautiful smuggler is terrified when a mysterious stranger uncovers her family's darkest secret...only to learn fate has a surprise in store for her. |The Unwanted Bride| by Suzanne Robinson. When a dashing earl proposes to a woman he's never seen, he ends up with the wrong bride...and, just maybe, his heart's desire. Six spellbinding stories that are pure magic...from today's most beloved romance authors.

This Book was ranked at 3 by Google Books for keyword Best Sellers.

Book ID of When You Wish's Books is --hdCQAAQBAJ, Book which was written byBestsellers - Books USA Presshave ETAG "NGv8cr8rAdM"

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This Book was rated by 1 Raters and have average rate at "5.0"

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Don't you sort of hate how we have entered the decadent period of Goodreads where probably fifty % (or more) of the evaluations published by non-teenagers and non-romancers are now actually naked and unabashed within their variously effective attempts at being posture, wry, meta, parodic, confessional, and/or snarky? Don't you type of maple (secretly, in the marrow of your gut's merry druthers) for the good ol'days of Goodreads (known then as GodFearingGoodlyReading.com) when all opinions were evenly plainspoke Do not you kind of hate how we have entered the decadent stage of Goodreads where perhaps fifty per cent (or more) of the opinions written by non-teenagers and non-romancers are now nude and unabashed in their variously effective efforts at being posture, wry, meta, parodic, confessional, and/or snarky? Don't you type of wood (secretly, in the marrow of one's gut's merry druthers) for the good ol'times of Goodreads (known then as GodFearingGoodlyReading.com) when all opinions were consistently plainspoken, just effective, unpretentious, and -- especially else -- dull, boring, boring? Don't you type of loathe when persons state'do not you believe in this manner or experience like that'in an attempt to goad you equally psychologically and grammatically into accepting with them? In the words of ABBA: I actually do, I do, I do(, I actually do, I do). Well, as the interwebs is really a world in which yesteryear stands shoulder-to-shoulder with the current (and with fetish porn), we can revisit yesteryear in its inviolable presentness any moment we wish. Or at the very least till this website ultimately tanks. Consider (won't you?) Matt Nieberle's overview of Macbeth in their entirety. I've destined it with a heavy string and pulled it here for your perusal. (Please recognize that several a sic are intended in the next reviews.) its really difficult and foolish! why cant we be reading like Romeo and Juliet?!?! at the least that book is great! There you've it. Refreshingly, not just a evaluation written in one of the witch's voices or alluding to Hillary and Bill Clinton or discussing the reviewer's first period. Only a primal scream unleashed in to the dark wilderness of the cosmos.Yes, Mr. Nieberle is (probably) a teen, but I admire his ability to strongarm the temptation to be clever or ironic. (Don't you?) He speaks the native language of the idk generation having an economy and a clarity that renders his convictions all the more emphatic. Here's MICHAEL's review of the same play. You may'know'MICHAEL; he is the'Problems Architect'at Goodreads. (A problematic title itself in so it implies that he designs problems... which might be the case, for all I know.) This book shouldn't be required reading... reading plays that you do not want to learn is awful. Reading a play kinda sucks in the first place, if it absolutely was designed to be read, then it would be a novel, not just a play. Together with that the teach had us students see the play aloud (on person for each character for a few pages). None people had see the play before. None people wanted to see it (I made the mistake of taking the'easy'english class for 6 years). The teacher picked students that appeared to be they weren't paying attention. All this compounded to create me pretty much hate reading classics for something similar to 10 years (granted macbeth alone wasn't the problem). I also hate iambic pentameter. Pure activism there. STOP the mandatory reading of plays. It's wrong, morally and academically. And yes it really can fuck up your GPA. There's no wasteful extravagance in this editorial... no fanfare, no fireworks, no linked photos of half-naked, oiled-up, big-bosomed starlets, no invented dialogues between mcdougal and the review-writer. It's simple and memorable. Being required to read plays is wrong, and in the event that you require anyone, under duress, to see a play you then have sinned and are likely to hell, in the event that you rely on hell. If not, you're likely to the DMV. I'm also fed up with whatever you smug spelling snobs. You damnable fascists together with your new-fangled dictionaries and your fancy-schmancy spell check. Sometimes the passionate immediacy of a message overcomes its spelling limitations. Also, in this age when we are taught to respect each other's differences, this indicates offensively egocentric and mean-spirited to expect others tokowtow in your small linguistic rules. Artsy term will free of charge themselves no matter how you are probably trying to help shackle it. That is certainly your own signal, Aubrey. Inside our opinion, this engage in Macbeth appeared to be your worste peice previously provided by Shakespeare, and this says quite a bit thinking of i also examine the Romeo as well as Juliet. Ontop of it is really currently unbelievable piece, impracticable personas plus absolutly discusting group of morals, Shakespeare publicly molds Lovely lady Macbeth as being the real vilian within the play. Thinking about she is mearly this speech in the spine game and also Macbeth him or her self is actually truely enacting a horrible criminal offenses, like kill as well as fraudulence, I don't realise why it is so straightforward to believe that Macbeth would certainly be ready to complete beneficial rather than nasty if perhaps his / her spouse had been additional possitive. I think until this perform can be uterally unrealistic. Yet the subsequent is definitely this ne plus especially connected with classic e book reviewing. Although succinct along with with no distracting trend to help coyness and also cuteness, Jo's assessment alludes with a anger therefore profound that it's inexpressible. A person imagines some Signet Basic Versions compromised for you to chunks together with pruning shears with Jo's vicinity. I dispise this play. So much so that will I can not actually present you with almost any analogies or similes with regards to the amount of We detest it. A strong incrementally snarkier form will often have stated something like...'I dislike this specific enjoy as being a simile I am unable to occur with.' Not Jo. Your woman speaks some sort of raw, undecorated real truth not fit intended for figurative language. And there is nothing wrong having that. As soon as within an incredible even though, when you invest in neck-deep inside dandified pomo hijinks, it is really an excellent wallow in the hog compose you're itchin'for. Thank you, Jo. I like anyone with a useless gripping on similes this can not tactic this bilious hatred in the heart. You will be acquire, in addition to I'm yours. Figuratively communicating, connected with course. And now here i will discuss our evaluate: Macbeth simply by Bill Shakespeare is best literary perform in the British vocabulary, and also anyone who disagrees can be an asshole plus a dumbhead.

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