Selasa, 28 Juli 2015

THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt

THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt

So, also you need obligation from the company, you might not be perplexed anymore due to the fact that publications THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin Comics), By Kate Hewitt will consistently aid you. If this THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin Comics), By Kate Hewitt is your best companion today to cover your job or job, you could as quickly as feasible get this publication. Exactly how? As we have told recently, merely visit the link that our company offer right here. The conclusion is not only guide THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin Comics), By Kate Hewitt that you search for; it is how you will obtain lots of books to assist your ability and also capability to have great performance.

THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt

THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt



THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt

Download PDF Ebook Online THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt

Four years ago, physiotherapist Lucy, who worked with England’s national rugby team, fell in love with Khaled, their star player. But one day, without giving any reason, Khaled abandoned Lucy and returned to his hometown of Biryal—without knowing a critical truth. Hearing that the team’s next stop will be in Biryal, Lucy makes up her mind. She will meet him once again, if only to share her long-buried secret. But the man who welcomes her at the airport is nothing like the man she once loved:, now, Khaled is a ruthless Sheikh!.

THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #489420 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-10-05
  • Released on: 2015-10-05
  • Format: Kindle eBook
THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt

About the Author Kate Hewitt has worked a variety of different jobs, from drama teacher to editorial assistant to church youth worker, but writing romance is the best one yet. She also writes short stories and serials for women's magazines, and all her stories celebrate the healing and redemptive power of love. Kate lives in a tiny village with her husband, five children, and an overly affectionate Golden Retriever.


THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt

Where to Download THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt

Most helpful customer reviews

7 of 9 people found the following review helpful. Skip this one! By Minehava I have read my share of romance and this one was the only one I openly disliked. I'm sorry to say that the story is contrived and unrealistic, even for a romance mush book. Do not get me wrong I love soap operas, as long as I get feisty heroine and decently fleshed hero, I'm happy. But I couldn't find any redeeming qualities in the 'one-track-feel-sorry-for-me' hero and the barely there heroine. I also had some problems with the factual information, I felt was inaccurate and/or not well researched. My reasons below give spoilers so continue with caution.SPOILERS BEGIN HERE:Plot: A rugby star has serious injury and flees to his desert home. His girlfriend informs him 3 years later that he has a son. Thinking (illogically) that he will not be iterested in the first born son that is by any sense the next crown prince.Some issues I had with the book:1: How can the SOLE son of a king be 'worthless' ending up in London and playing an international championates of a game (rugby) that is for its violence looked down upon through out the rest of the world and played only in the USA. Then have injury and bang...become the crown prince in the span of 4 years with no explanation how did that ... miracle ... came about.Please note that it has been pointed out to me that the son was illegitimate... but there is no mention or hint of such illegitimacy in the book as far as I'm aware of. Furthermore even if he had been illegitimate, under sharia if he is the ONLY offspring of the father he is legitimate, as long as the father accepts him as the 'fruit-of-his-loins' so to speak, and or his paternity can be proved.2: No american would call it 'rugby' but (american) football.Please note that if the book is published in US, by US publishing house their editor should have corrected this. The author is using British terms and non US cultural references, that are different enough to cause some confusions.3: This book is full of small contradictions, that ruin the story as a whole:'My son is 3' followed by 'he goes to school next year' ..... what school has 4 year old first-graders?'The wedding will be in a fortnight' followed by ' few days later he anounced that the wedding is a fortnight from today' .... what is with that timeline? And why is everything happening either in 'few days' or in 'fortnight' and '4 days'???4: The dialogs are not making any sense. They both say things unrelated to the issues they are discussing.5: There are only 2 characters. Both are flat, underdeveloped, UNLIKABLE and frankly very .... dense... All others are shadows passing by.When I get the 'blue mood' I enjoy a 'romantic mush' as this category is often called, but trust me on this: this is the worst book I was unfortunate enough to read and I do have 1600 + books behind me!

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Nice read if you like a wounded hero! By F. Schimmel Soooodo not agree with Minehava's review of this book, complaining about how it should be american football iso rugby, etc. This book is partly set in England, where the glorious sport of rugby is played (as well as in over 100 countries worldwide)- you know, the hands-on body contact sports where the players are not covered head to toe in protective gear :-)In many European countries children start going to school at age 4- it's called kindergarten, and is 'school'; so 3-year-old would be going to school 'next year'.Khaled is a great wounded hero, who was self-absorbed 4 years ago, but faced with a son he knew nothing about as a consequence of a decision then, now he is coming round. Lucy has abandonment issues dating back to childhood, and the two of them go through a fair amount of ups and downs before the happy end. An epilogue would have been a nice addition though.Kate Hewitt knows how to portrait a wounded hero. Bring us more, please!

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. ;0( By Lady Raven RAVE! This book is ok. I love sheik romances but this one was not doing it for me. It could have been more the misunderstanding gave me headaches. I'm not being mean but read at your own risk blah blah blah.Reviewed by

See all 4 customer reviews... THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt


THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt PDF
THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt iBooks
THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt ePub
THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt rtf
THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt AZW
THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt Kindle

THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt

THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt

THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt
THE SHEIKH'S LOVE-CHILD (Harlequin comics), by Kate Hewitt

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar