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Never Before
Nancy Price
She isn't who she thinks she is, he isn't who she thinks he is and that is just the beginning. -- Ebay.com
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Playing with Fire
Nancy Price
In the years after World War II, a rich father and his daughter unknowingly marry a man and woman who have loved each other in the past. When the father and daughter learn the truth, one of them forgives but the other cannot. -- Amazon.com
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Stolen Away
Nancy Price
Dominic Crowell is determined to raise his two-year-old son, Nicky. Nothing will stop him except Nicky's mother Amy. He won't marry Amy. He has a rich girl in mind. One cold Chicago night Amy and Nicky steal away. Where can a mother and child hide? Amy will never go back to Dominic; he has abused Nicky over and over; the child screams when he sees his father. Perhaps she can steal the boy away to Iowa? But Dominic is after them. He has married his rich girl, and he has money and time, and a gun. He wants his son, and he will kill to get him. -- Amazon.com
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Two Hundred Men, One Woman
Nancy Price
Sophia Wentworth has lost all hope of marriage--she is hungry and poor. England is fighting alone against Napoleon on land and sea. But soon three men will want to marry Sophia. One takes her to war with him: she is a lone woman with two hundred men on a fighting ship. The second man loves her so much that he will give her all she owns. The third man loves her too much to tell her--ever--the secret of her past. -- WaterstonesMarketplace.com
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Two Voices and a Moon
Nancy Price
Nancy Price was a poet before she wrote the novel Sleeping with the Enemy. More than a hundred of her poems have appeared nation-wide in such publications as The Atlantic, The New York Times, and Saturday Review. The sixty-five poems are set off with Nancy's own illustrations, including the cover and endpapers. -- WaterstonesMarketplace.com
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No One Knows
Nancy Price
A love story, a mystery, and a small town in World War II. What if you want--and deserve--revenge? Miranda is bright, funny and pretty. She loves two men who want her as much as they hate each other. The war changes all three. Miranda has a happy life, and a secret. She keeps it until no one remembers. No one knows. -- nancypricebooks.com
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Night Woman
Nancy Price
The world thinks Randal Eliot writes during his manic phases, but his wife Mary creates his famous books and supports their family. When Randal dies, no one will believe she is the genius. She marries a younger man, Paul, a Randal Eliot scholar. Paul cannot bear to believe Mary is the genius—she will destroy his life work and Randal Eliot’s reputation. He has killed before. He must kill again. -- nancypricebooks.com
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Sleeping with the Enemy
Nancy Price
A wife fakes her death to escape the most dangerous man she knows: her husband. But cruel Martin Burney discovers his wife is alive, and stalks her in a small town. A young professor there is courting her, but one night she knows her compulsively neat husband has entered her house to rearrange towels in her bath and canned goods in her kitchen. He's found her. He's out there. -- nancypricebooks.com
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An Accomplished Woman
Nancy Price
When Catherine Buckingham’s parents die, her young uncle, Thorn Wade, becomes her guardian and raises her as her mother wished, so Catherine becomes an adult who is not like the men—or women—of the world around her: she is a sexual creature we seldom encounter. With innocent joy Catherine explores her amorous feelings for the man who has raised her, while Thorn will not take any male initiative by word, look or action. They keep the memory of that summer like a promise they will someday fulfill. But Thorn must leave to fight in World War II. Catherine is told he is dead, and learns, painfully, how to be like women of the 40’s and 50’s. Yet Thorn is alive, and comes to find a Catherine who is finished, accomplished. How can she face the man who formed her for another life? -- nancypricebooks.com
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A Natural Death
Nancy Price
Three courageous young people, one a new white slave mistress, two captured black slaves--meet on South Carolina rice plantations during the summer of 1850. Black Joan and her husband Will have been raised free, then captured. Their civilized virtues make Joan valuable as a maid in the Big House, and Will soon becomes the black slave driver. Slavery's subtle poison corrupts the three industrious, warm-hearted young people, slave mistress as well as slaves. They have no choice; they survive, even triumph, just as capable young people trapped in a sick society would survive and triumph today. -- nancypricebooks.com
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