Sweets to the Sweet


Book Description

When single mom Laura Anderson rear-ends a vintage Austin-Healey while taking her baby to the doctor, the last thing she expects is to find her Prince Charming behind the wheel. There’s nothing quite as sexy to a new mother as a man who has a way with babies and comes bearing gifts of gourmet chocolate! Especially when his kisses inspire feelings she thought were lost forever... Chocolate baron Owen Reesling knows he should stay away from Laura, a woman still obviously wounded by the breakup of her marriage. But he can’t help but fall for the beauty—and her baby. He won’t push her into a relationship, but he’s determined to do whatever it takes to break down the wall she’s built around her heart and convince her to take another chance on love. Previously published. 42,000 words




Sweets to the Sweet ...


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Varia on the Text of Hamlet


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Sweets to the Sweet


Book Description

Filled with the author's favorite recipes for cakes, pies, puddings, and other delightful treats, "Sweets to the Sweet" also includes a recipe by the lucky winner of the "Heart of the Home" recipe contest. Hand-lettered and decorated with Branch's inimitable watercolor paintings, this book makes a lovely gift.




Sweets to the Sweet


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Food


Book Description

Each of the more than seven hundred entries in the dictionary contains a description of the historical background of each of the two types of language, literal and nonliteral, and provides an explanation for the relationship between them. Wherever possible, dates of first record in English are provided, along with the bibliographical sources of these dates; and all of the works that record those terms and expressions are given in coded form as listed in the Key to Works Cited. A Guide to Reading the Entries illustrates the typical form of an entry by analyzing an example from the dictionary that introduces five nonliteral expressions, cites thirteen bibliographical sources, and refers the reader to three other relevant entries by means of cross-references. Following the dictionary proper is a Classification of Terms According to Source, in which nearly three hundred nonliteral terms and expressions are listed under the more than four hundred literal categories from which they derive.