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Opposites don't always attract. Sometimes they clash and spark fire. Lonely orphan turned highly sought after corporate trainer, Kelly Thompson, is ready for a change of pace in the small town of Sweet Blooms. Joshua Case, the haunted high school counselor who survived, is ready to take on a new project to help the teens in Sweet Blooms. When Joshua and Kelly find themselves working on the same project, they'll have to find a way to put their difference aside and work together. In so doing will they learn to trust together, and love together? This sweet story is a delicious clash of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Opposites don't always attract. Sometimes they clash and spark fire. Lonely orphan turned highly sought after corporate trainer, Kelly Thompson, is ready for a change of pace in the small town of Sweet Blooms. Joshua Case, the haunted high school counselor who survived, is ready to take on a new project to help the teens in Sweet Blooms. When Joshua and Kelly find themselves working on the same project, they'll have to find a way to put their difference aside and work together. In so doing will they learn to trust together, and love together? This sweet story is a delicious clash of personalities who are striving for a good cause. You're certain to be swept away and having Sweet Dreams in no time! Get your copy today!
Autorenporträt
Susan Bogert Warner was an American Presbyterian author of religious fiction, children's books, and theology writings. She is well known for The Wide, Wide World. Her previous works include Queechy, The Hills of Shatemuck, Melbourne House, Daisy, Walks from Eden, House of Israel, What She Could, Opportunities, and House in Town. Warner and her sister, Anna, authored a series of semi-religious books that were extremely successful, including Say and Seal, Christmas Stocking, Books of Blessing, 8 vols., and The Law and the Testimony. Susan Warner was born in New York City on July 11, 1819. Warner could trace her family history back to the Puritans on both sides. Her father, Henry Warner, was a New York City lawyer originating from New England, and her mother, Anna Bartlett, was from a wealthy, fashionable family in Hudson Square. When Warner was a young child, her mother died, and her father's sister, Fanny, moved in with the Warners. Despite being wealthy, the father lost the majority of his income during the Panic of 1837, as well as via following lawsuits and disastrous investments.