This novel by Catherine Gaskin is a pretty mediocre but satisfying for what it says on the tin romance romp through antique shop clerk Maura's enticing dalliance with an enigmatic Irishman, who shows up suspiciously close to the disappearance from the D'Arcy shop of an almost priceless glassware item; the Cullodan Cup, the last in known existence as t'other is inconveniently smashed near the novel's kickoff.
Not really my cup of tea, but it was fun to try a genre I usually steer clear of. If it sounds like your kind of book though, there is alongside the Cheap-as-Freebook a well-brown'd copy of it in the Trewan Hall library. To be perfectly honest it was a pretty tough one to speed-read, but I pushed on as it had a vaguely Seymourish smell to the prose.
Not really my cup of tea, but it was fun to try a genre I usually steer clear of. If it sounds like your kind of book though, there is alongside the Cheap-as-Freebook a well-brown'd copy of it in the Trewan Hall library. To be perfectly honest it was a pretty tough one to speed-read, but I pushed on as it had a vaguely Seymourish smell to the prose.
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