Fotografía de autor

Betty Beaty

Autor de Master at Arms

17 Obras 58 Miembros 2 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Incluye el nombre: Beaty Betty

Nota de desambiguación:

(eng) Betty Joan Campbell Smith Beaty wrote as Betty Smith and Betty Beaty, and she also used the pseudonyms of Karen Campbell and Catherine Ross.

Obras de Betty Beaty

Master at Arms (1978) 8 copias
Head of Chancery (1976) 7 copias
Fly Away, Love (1977) 7 copias
South to the Sun (1979) 7 copias
Amber Five (1964) 6 copias
Love And The Kentish Maid (1975) 5 copias
Miss Miranda's Walk (1974) 3 copias
The Atlantic Sky (1967) 3 copias
The Top of the Climb (1962) 2 copias
Maiden Flight (1972) 2 copias
The Path of the Moonfish (2000) 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre legal
Smith Beaty, Betty Joan Campbell
Otros nombres
Smith, Betty
Beaty, Betty
Campbell, Karen
Ross, Catherine
Género
female
Nacionalidad
UK (birth)
Lugares de residencia
Farsley, Yorkshire, England, UK (birth)
Relaciones
Beaty, David (husband)
Biografía breve
Betty Joan Campbell Smith was born Farsley, Yorkshire, England, UK. Educated at Bradford Girls Grammar School; she obtained a diploma in social science and public administration at Leeds University. She served in the Women's Auxiliary Air Force. In 29 April 1948, she married the also writer David Beaty, she had three children.
Aviso de desambiguación
Betty Joan Campbell Smith Beaty wrote as Betty Smith and Betty Beaty, and she also used the pseudonyms of Karen Campbell and Catherine Ross.

Miembros

Reseñas

Sweet romance set at sea with Kate as chaperone for a high school group going on a cruise through the Mediterranean and Mark, the Master at Arms on the ship. They clash but bond together over Barney, a stowaway.

I enjoyed this sweet tale. I liked that it took me into the world of Kate and Mark and the cruise. It was perfect for sitting outside on a summer night and cruising away from the reality of 2020. Need I say more?
 
Denunciada
Sheila1957 | Sep 12, 2020 |
Exactly what it says on the tin: our heroine Charlotte has been in love with her brother's friend Bill, for half a dozen years. They grew up together, of a sort; Charlotte's family moved around frequently because her father was a diplomat, and the family took Bill in as a child after his parents died. Charlotte longed for her hometown village in Kent, however, and made it a point to return there after she finished secretarial school. She works for the local squire, who opens his manor home to paying guests on certain days of the week. If she could turn back time, she would - she loves the idyll of her tiny country hometown.

Bill comes to visit after eight years apart, and Charlotte is at first happy to see him, but when she learns of his reasons for coming (besides visiting a nearby aunt), she's heartbroken. It seems mechanical engineer Bill wants to erect an oil derrick right there in the hamlet! Charlotte leads the crusade against the modernization of the village, along with her employer, but ultimately it's a fight in vain. The oilmen are here to stay, it seems, at least as long as it takes to survey the place.

Charlotte is also piqued because Bill seems to be paying an awful lot of attention to her employer's spoiled, bitchy daughter, Eloise - and the nephew, Jason, seems to be advancing a very unwelcome suit on her. Thanks to a bunch of old skool romantic tropes and some dumb Big Misunderstandings, both Charlotte and Bill think each other out of reach, and to marry (or already married to) someone else. It takes a huge disaster in the form of a flood to straighten everything out.

This is a competently written short novel, completely in its 1976 element. Apparently the men show their affection by being cold, hostile, and downright aggressive; I for one never really believed Bill was pining away for Charlotte, considering he did everything in his power to either outright insult her, or at least stay away from her. There's subtle, and then there's complete omission, and sadly, this novel's romantic plots (for there are many!) fell squarely into the second bucket.

So, this was worth the read, and worth the 50c I paid for it, but I can't really recommend it to anyone who doesn't have an interest in vintage Harlequin novels.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
eurohackie | Feb 28, 2019 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
17
Miembros
58
Popularidad
#284,346
Valoración
½ 2.6
Reseñas
2
ISBNs
28
Idiomas
1

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