Bella Arabella


Book Description




Bella Arabella


Book Description

Trying to avoid being sent off to boarding school, ten-year-old Arabella wishes she could become a cat, only for her wish to reveal itself as a nightmare after all. Against her wishes, Arabella’s stepdad is determined to send the ten-year-old off to boarding school. Thinking of every possible way to avoid this ill fate, Arabella wishes she could become a cat. Though she thought becoming a cat would solve all her problems and get her out of going to boarding school, when her wishes come true, Arabella is in for a rude awakening. As she quickly discovers that her new life as a cat is fraught with unknown terrors, she begins to realize her former life was not so bad after all.




Bella Arabella


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Arabella Stuart


Book Description

"Arabella Stuart" is a historical novel about Arabella Stuart of the Stuart royal line, a claimant to Great Britain's throne when she married William Seymour, 2nd Duke of Somerset. She was later imprisoned in the Tower of London by King James. This novel by G.P.R. James presents the life of the possible queen as a romantic love story full of incredible adventures and court intrigues.




Arabella Stuart


Book Description




Arabella Stuart


Book Description




Arabella


Book Description

Updated edition of the beloved classic by the Queen of Regency romance herself, Georgette Heyer, featuring a new Foreword by New York Times bestselling author Eloisa James. Arabella's one little while lie has spread through the ton like wildfire... Arabella Tallant, modest daughter of a country clergyman, is on her way to her first London Season when her carriage breaks down outside the estate of the wealthy and bored Mr. Robert Beaumaris. Beau assumes she's simply another young lady throwing herself in his path, which goads the impetuous Arabella into pretending she's an heiress. Much to Arabella's dismay, rather than being brutally set-down, as she intended, Beaumaris is deeply amused. He counters by launching her into high society, which Arabella would enjoy very much if it wasn't for the fortune hunters. Arabella's unpredictable and innocent ways force Beaumaris to start helping others, including a stray dog, an unfortunate urchin, and eventually Arabella's reckless young brother. Along the way, Arabella and Beaumaris become more and more intrigued with each other—which neither will admit, of course, until under extreme duress. "Absolutely delicious tales of Regency heroes... Utter, immersive escapism."—SOPHIE KINSELLA "No one has ever matched Georgette Heyer for charm and wit." —LISA KLEYPAS "Utterly timeless charm... The dialogue sparkles with wit." —NORA ROBERTS, #1 New York Times bestselling author "Romance, adventure, side-splitting humor—no one writes like Georgette Heyer!" —LAUREN WILLIG, New York Times bestselling author




Arabella


Book Description

Narrated by the protagonist, Arabella is a forgotten page of a singer's diary. Where he tells how he went on to meet the woman of his dreams, his thoughts and how she looked like an anesthesia to his pains stemming from his ill-resolved relationship with his ex. That woman who was alone in a big alternative music festival. That woman who seemed to belong to no one but him. She had been made for him. A modern lover with a septentist head.




Arabella Dreams


Book Description

Arabella Angarrick is heartbroken. Exiled from her beloved Cornwall, she must come to terms with life on the Canadian prairies and her arranged marriage to D'Arcy Rowan. She struggles to reconcile herself to life on a remote ranch with a man she barely knows. He knows he's getting a two for one deal and Bella is thankful he is happy to welcome her unborn child into his home. D'Arcy is a kind man, but try as she might, Bella just can't bring herself to love him. Her heart still yearns for Vear Du, the father of her baby. Will she ever stop dreaming of her selkie?




Private Sphere to World Stage from Austen to Eliot


Book Description

Though the focus is on British novelists, Sabiston's discussion of the Anglo-American connections in the factory novels of Elizabeth Gaskell and the slavery writings of Harriet Beecher Stowe has particular relevance for its demonstration of how the move from the private to the public sphere enables and even compels the blurring of national and ethnic boundaries. What emerges is a compelling argument for the relevance of these novelists to the emergence in our own time of hitherto-silenced female voices around the globe."--BOOK JACKET.