Marriage and Mary Ann
โ Scribed by Cookson, Catherine
- Publisher
- Peach Publishing
- Year
- 1964
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 96 KB
- Series
- Mary Ann 1
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN
- 1780360800
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
It hardly seems possible, but Mary Ann Shaughnessy, the irrepressible child of Tyneside whose tempestuous journey through life thousands of readers have followed in the five books previous to this, is engaged to be married. The wedding is set to be in five weeks time. Everything in the garden is expected to be lovely, but few things go all together smoothly in this life particularly when associated with the Shaughnessy family and once again Mary Ann finds herself involved in sorting out the problems of those she loves.
Mary Anns father, Mike, reluctant to accept that his romantic days are on the wane, has a last fling during a visit to a holiday camp. Was it really just a fling, was it just the dangerous age, or was it just an over-anxious Mary Ann seeing something that wasnt there? And Mr. Lord wants to help finance the newly-weds in the purchase of a garage, which Corny, that sturdily independent young man, will have nothing to do with. A number of family storms have to blow themselves out before all can be happily resolved.
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ES Index : 6
Has Cover : Yes
Number of Words in Auth: 2
Formats : EPUB
Number of Formats : 1
All Identifiers : amazon:B004TO5UX0, goodreads:19253853, isbn:9781780360805
Test Text Series Index: Series
Single Author : Catherine Cookson
Original Source : New_Files_Pondering42_07_18
Sorted Author by LN, FN: Cookson, Catherine
Title Length : 021
Title Parm D : Marriage and Mary Ann
Title Parm F : Marriage and Mary Ann
Num of Aut : 1
Title Parm B : (
ES Lib Name : NIRC 2019-07
Record ID : 14882
Template Work Area : Series
ES Name : Mary Ann Series
Uncomma Author : Catherine Cookson
Title Parm A : Marriage and Mary Ann
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Her expensive convent education hadn't changed Mary Ann Shaughnessy one little bit. Sure, she could come over all refined when she had to, but who'd want to talk ever so nice on a farm? But in other respects she was growing up fast. As Mary Ann began to learn about the feelings of adults, so co