Another enchanting, romantic novel, following the fortunes of the characters from her bestselling Going the Distance. Jemima Carlisle started by having a bad month -- being made redundant, having nowhere to live, worrying about her bankrupt father. Her decision to take up village life, rent a room i
Jumping to Conclusions
β Scribed by Jones, Christina
- Publisher
- HarperCollins
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 276 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781471308987
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Another enchanting, romantic novel, following the fortunes of the characters from her bestselling Going the Distance. Jemima Carlisle started by having a bad month -- being made redundant, having nowhere to live, worrying about her bankrupt father. Her decision to take up village life, rent a room in the local vicar's house, and work at the local cafe did not work out as the peaceful life she had thought. The village was a centre for stables, with a couple of Grand National favourites -- and Jemima hated horses for a very personal reason. And the enterprise of opening a local bookshop led her straight into village controversy. The target of one group's fatwa, the sharer of the vicar's wife's dark secrets, the piggy in the middle of a tempestuous relationship might have been enough for Jemima, but the arrival of her father with some new money-making scam, and the attempts by various local talents among the jockeys to alter her views on horse-racing, made her realise that one should never jump to conclusions.
About the Author
Christina Jones, brought up in a circus family, wrote short stories for some time before being encouraged to write her first novel, Going the Distance, which became a highly successful WHS Fresh Talent entry. She is married and lives outside Oxford. This is her fourth novel.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Abduction is usually defined as the process of inferring the best explanation of an observation. There are many information processing operations that can be viewed as a search for an explanation. For instance, diagnosis, natural language interpretation and plan recognition. This paper is concerned
The main feature of the COST F3 Working Group was to identify structures that exhibit a non-linear behaviour. In this context, two benchmarks were proposed, namely, the VTT benchmark and the ECL benchmark.