ANNE B. (prairiegrass1) reviewed A Family Resemblance (Harlequin Superromance, No 1357) (Larger Print) on + 29 more book reviews
This book was boring and forgettable. I have read several earlier novels by this author. Even though romance novels, the writing was rich and well done. That was not the case here.
Belenda W. (belenda) reviewed A Family Resemblance (Harlequin Superromance, No 1357) (Larger Print) on + 193 more book reviews
More than four years after the death of her husband in an avalanche, widow Sabine Knoll gets a second chance at love with Joe, the brother she never knew he had. But when she can't get over her fears -- and he's unwilling to give up climbing -- their relationship becomes just complicated. A Family Resemblance (3), by Margot Early, has good details and description. The story gives a clear peek into what it's like to climb one of the world's largest mountains, which is something most of us will never experience.
Alexandra Kay (romantictimes.com)
Alexandra Kay (romantictimes.com)
Anny P. (wolfnme) reviewed A Family Resemblance (Harlequin Superromance, No 1357) (Larger Print) on + 3389 more book reviews
Book Description
Sometimes a family resemblance is hard to see...especially if you're not looking for one. And Sabine Knoll isn't.
She's the widow of Victor Knoll and the mother of his three children. She loved him -- deeply -- and even though he's been gone four years, she can't imagine loving anyone else.
Then a man named Joe appears in her small town of Oro, Colorado. Joe Knoll. Victor's brother. Except that Victor never told her he had a brother. And if he'd lied about that, had he lied about other things, too?
Sabine isn't sure she wants to know. She is sure she doesn't want to fall in love with this man who resembles her husband in some ways, yet not in others. The man who's becoming a part of her children's lives -- and of hers.
Sometimes a family resemblance is hard to see...especially if you're not looking for one. And Sabine Knoll isn't.
She's the widow of Victor Knoll and the mother of his three children. She loved him -- deeply -- and even though he's been gone four years, she can't imagine loving anyone else.
Then a man named Joe appears in her small town of Oro, Colorado. Joe Knoll. Victor's brother. Except that Victor never told her he had a brother. And if he'd lied about that, had he lied about other things, too?
Sabine isn't sure she wants to know. She is sure she doesn't want to fall in love with this man who resembles her husband in some ways, yet not in others. The man who's becoming a part of her children's lives -- and of hers.