While It Was Snowing de London Julia
29.90 CHF
Date de parution : 10.2025
Format : Broché
Nombre de pages : 320
Résumé : Under the mistletoe, a single mom and a professional athlete realize they have more in common than the lake house they unexpectedly have to share for the holidays, in this heartwarming romance from New York Times bestselling author Julia London. All Amy Casey wants for Christmas is to paint. She needs five new paintings for the holiday show at her local art gallery, but between her two teenage sons, her needy ex-husband, and her overbearing parents, she hardly has any time for herself. Luckily, her best friend has the perfect solution: a vacant family lake house in North Texas, all hers for two weeks of distraction-free painting. Or so she thought. Turns out professional golfer Harrison Neely also rented the lake house so he can spend the holidays rehabbing the injury that has put his career—and life—on hold. Despite the booking snafu, both Amy and Harrison (along with Amy's old blind dog and the army of child-sized nutcrackers residing in the living room) agree to share the festive lodging. When an impending snowstorm has the two cozying up by the fire, sparks fly in more ways than one, and they open up to each other, unwrapping secrets and stories they’ve never shared before. But Harrison is expected back on the tournament circuit after the holidays, and Amy's family needs her. As their departure date looms and her family and his manager press them for answers, they’ll have to decide if this December to remember has been a fun holiday fling, or if they’ve found a Christmas miracle: true love.; Leseprobe 1 Christmas Season North Texas The house was to die for. It was exactly what Amy Casey's best friend, Julie Kleinhoff, had promised-a luxury lake house on the shore of Lake Texoma, with eight bedrooms and nine baths, a separate and cozy artist's studio, a pool, a hot tub, a chef's kitchen, stunning lake views, and Christmas trees in every room. Child-sized nutcrackers armed the entrance of the dining room, the living room, and the kitchen. Santa, his sleigh, and his nine reindeer were suspended from the ceiling in the great room in a manner that suggested they would land on the massive hearth at any moment. Two beautiful wreaths hung on the double front doors, wood was stacked next to the enormous fireplace. Giant clumps of mistletoe, probably harvested from right outside, hung from every archway. Each room had a theme-cozy-cabin Christmas, festive beachy Christmas, old England Christmas. It was a holiday feast for the eyes and the spirit, and it was all for Amy, for two full weeks, at no cost. Two weeks that she could not possibly carve out of her busy life again, given the number of people in her family who relied on her for every little thing. Two weeks that she would have all this fabulousness to create art, painting the images of the beauty around her that lived in her head, experiencing the artist's life she'd once dreamed about; to be someone other than mother/ex-wife/daughter/employee. To be all by herself. Well. Her dog, Duchess, had come. But Duchess was old and blind and practically deaf. She would sleep all day. So yes, all by herself, for the first time in years. Julie knew that was important to Amy and had helped her plan this getaway. Julie's family owned this luxury, so she could pull all the strings to make this magic happen for Amy. So there was no way that a man should be standing in the kitchen. Perhaps even more urgent, there was no way Amy was going to be able to fight him wearing a bathrobe as thick and cozy as a sheepskin rug, with her hair wrapped in a towel. Speaking of which, if she didn't take that towel off and put some product in her hair in the next five minutes, it would dry frizzy and weird, and she could not have that. She had also decided to go for a bohemian vibe during her two-week retreat (more elastic, less underwire). She folded her arms across her chest and said in her most authoritative tone (a tone that, let's be honest, worked less and less on her family these days, but was all she had), "I'm not leaving." The man, whose name she had yet to learn, picked up one of the apples she'd brought and said, rather too calmly given the circumstance, "Neither am I." How had such a horrendous mistake been made? When Amy had first wandered into the kitchen and seen this tall, trim man in cargo shorts and a Houston Astros T-shirt and wearing his baseball hat backward, she'd been so startled, she'd shrieked. He had likewise been startled and at the very same moment, he'd yelped like someone had goosed him, and dropped the sandwich he was holding. "Oh no," he said, staring down at it. It was the sandwich that had thrown her off and kept her from lunging for a knife. She couldn't imagine that someone intent on killing her or robbing the house would take the time to make a sandwich. Much less bend down to clean up the mess. She'd assumed he was a maintenance man. But before she could voice her guess, he guessed that she was the housekeeper. "Excuse me?" "Okay," he'd said, clearly excusing her. Amy remembered in that moment that Ryan, her ex-husband, had urged her to bring a gun. "You need to protect yourself," he'd said, hitching up his pants. "I'd protect you if I was going-" "No chance," she'd said with a side eye for him. "And you know how much I hate guns." "This is the thing about you, Amy. You lump all guns into a single category-" "Goodbye, Ryan," Amy had said. That was the great thing about being fifty-two, divorced, and menopausal-Amy didn't feel nearly as compelled to stick around and give men a chance to mansplain like she had when she was younger. The moment Ryan started talking nonsense was the moment she started walking. Back to this guy. "I don't know what is going on here, but I have this house for two weeks." "So do I." He put the remains of the sandwich in the trash. "That's not possible. Julie lent it to me," Amy said. "I don't know who Julie is, but I rented it from Sam." And therein lay the problem. "Oh my God," Amy said immediately. Sam was Julie's sister, and together, they'd taken over the family lake house when their parents moved to a high-rise condominium in Dallas. The Kleinhoffs weren't ready to give the place up-it still made for a great family staycation spot-but they didn't like it sitting idle, either. Julie and Sam decided to list it on all the vacation house rental websites in the new year. But Amy seemed to remember that Julie and Sam had argued about it, because Sam felt like they were leaving money on the table by waiting until the new year. Sam apparently had jumped the gun. "I'll get Sam on the phone right now, and we'll clear this up," the guy said, and pulled a phone from his shorts pocket. "No, I'll get Julie on the phone, and we'll clear this up." Amy grabbed her phone from the pocket of her robe. And then she and the man stood there, phones drawn, staring at each other. "Who is Julie?" he asked after a moment. "Sam's sister." He stared some more. His brows dipped. "Are you suggesting that there has been some miscommunication in booking?" "Obviously." She pulled up Julie's contact and hit the call button. "Great," he said, punching something into his phone. "Sam and I had a nice chat about Byron Nelson." "Who's that?" Amy asked. The man gave her a withering look, put his phone to his ear, and walked out of the kitchen. By now, Amy's call had rolled to voicemail. "Julie!" she hissed into the phone, and glanced over her shoulder to make sure he wasn't listening. "Where are you? You need to call me-" The man was suddenly in front of her. "As soon as you can," she quickly added, and hung up. "What?" "Sam's not answering, and her voicemail is full." That tracked. Julie often complained about her sister not answering and having a full inbox. "What about you?" he asked, nodding to the phone she was gripping. "Not answering," Amy admitted. "Well. Here we are." He lowered his phone. So did Amy. He slid it back into his pocket. So did Amy. "We've got ourselves a problem," he added unnecessarily, then bit into her apple. "Not really," Amy said. "There's a resort up the road where you can probably get a room." "Funny," he said. "I meant it's a problem for you. I've paid in full for this place." He took another healthy bite of her apple. That was the moment Amy thought she might have to fight him. She considered her options and found them all lacking, and therefore resorted to throwing a fit. "I'm not leaving." "Neither am I." She braced her hands against the marble kitchen bar. "Look, Mr. . . . ?" "Neely." "Mr. Neely. I need this. Do you know how long it's been since I had alone time? Before my first son was born, seventeen years ago, that's when. I finally get a chance to do what I love-" "What's that?" Amy paused. "What's what?" "What do you love?" She felt a little ridiculous saying it, but who was this guy to her? "I'm an artist. A painter. Anyway, I have a show coming up, and I need to paint, and I need to be creative, and in order to be creative, I need space and alone time. Therefore, I need you to leave." "Huh," he said, and put the apple core on the countertop like a Neanderthal. "Well here's the thing, Mrs. . . . ?"
Format : Broché
Nombre de pages : 320
Résumé : Under the mistletoe, a single mom and a professional athlete realize they have more in common than the lake house they unexpectedly have to share for the holidays, in this heartwarming romance from New York Times bestselling author Julia London. All Amy Casey wants for Christmas is to paint. She needs five new paintings for the holiday show at her local art gallery, but between her two teenage sons, her needy ex-husband, and her overbearing parents, she hardly has any time for herself. Luckily, her best friend has the perfect solution: a vacant family lake house in North Texas, all hers for two weeks of distraction-free painting. Or so she thought. Turns out professional golfer Harrison Neely also rented the lake house so he can spend the holidays rehabbing the injury that has put his career—and life—on hold. Despite the booking snafu, both Amy and Harrison (along with Amy's old blind dog and the army of child-sized nutcrackers residing in the living room) agree to share the festive lodging. When an impending snowstorm has the two cozying up by the fire, sparks fly in more ways than one, and they open up to each other, unwrapping secrets and stories they’ve never shared before. But Harrison is expected back on the tournament circuit after the holidays, and Amy's family needs her. As their departure date looms and her family and his manager press them for answers, they’ll have to decide if this December to remember has been a fun holiday fling, or if they’ve found a Christmas miracle: true love.; Leseprobe 1 Christmas Season North Texas The house was to die for. It was exactly what Amy Casey's best friend, Julie Kleinhoff, had promised-a luxury lake house on the shore of Lake Texoma, with eight bedrooms and nine baths, a separate and cozy artist's studio, a pool, a hot tub, a chef's kitchen, stunning lake views, and Christmas trees in every room. Child-sized nutcrackers armed the entrance of the dining room, the living room, and the kitchen. Santa, his sleigh, and his nine reindeer were suspended from the ceiling in the great room in a manner that suggested they would land on the massive hearth at any moment. Two beautiful wreaths hung on the double front doors, wood was stacked next to the enormous fireplace. Giant clumps of mistletoe, probably harvested from right outside, hung from every archway. Each room had a theme-cozy-cabin Christmas, festive beachy Christmas, old England Christmas. It was a holiday feast for the eyes and the spirit, and it was all for Amy, for two full weeks, at no cost. Two weeks that she could not possibly carve out of her busy life again, given the number of people in her family who relied on her for every little thing. Two weeks that she would have all this fabulousness to create art, painting the images of the beauty around her that lived in her head, experiencing the artist's life she'd once dreamed about; to be someone other than mother/ex-wife/daughter/employee. To be all by herself. Well. Her dog, Duchess, had come. But Duchess was old and blind and practically deaf. She would sleep all day. So yes, all by herself, for the first time in years. Julie knew that was important to Amy and had helped her plan this getaway. Julie's family owned this luxury, so she could pull all the strings to make this magic happen for Amy. So there was no way that a man should be standing in the kitchen. Perhaps even more urgent, there was no way Amy was going to be able to fight him wearing a bathrobe as thick and cozy as a sheepskin rug, with her hair wrapped in a towel. Speaking of which, if she didn't take that towel off and put some product in her hair in the next five minutes, it would dry frizzy and weird, and she could not have that. She had also decided to go for a bohemian vibe during her two-week retreat (more elastic, less underwire). She folded her arms across her chest and said in her most authoritative tone (a tone that, let's be honest, worked less and less on her family these days, but was all she had), "I'm not leaving." The man, whose name she had yet to learn, picked up one of the apples she'd brought and said, rather too calmly given the circumstance, "Neither am I." How had such a horrendous mistake been made? When Amy had first wandered into the kitchen and seen this tall, trim man in cargo shorts and a Houston Astros T-shirt and wearing his baseball hat backward, she'd been so startled, she'd shrieked. He had likewise been startled and at the very same moment, he'd yelped like someone had goosed him, and dropped the sandwich he was holding. "Oh no," he said, staring down at it. It was the sandwich that had thrown her off and kept her from lunging for a knife. She couldn't imagine that someone intent on killing her or robbing the house would take the time to make a sandwich. Much less bend down to clean up the mess. She'd assumed he was a maintenance man. But before she could voice her guess, he guessed that she was the housekeeper. "Excuse me?" "Okay," he'd said, clearly excusing her. Amy remembered in that moment that Ryan, her ex-husband, had urged her to bring a gun. "You need to protect yourself," he'd said, hitching up his pants. "I'd protect you if I was going-" "No chance," she'd said with a side eye for him. "And you know how much I hate guns." "This is the thing about you, Amy. You lump all guns into a single category-" "Goodbye, Ryan," Amy had said. That was the great thing about being fifty-two, divorced, and menopausal-Amy didn't feel nearly as compelled to stick around and give men a chance to mansplain like she had when she was younger. The moment Ryan started talking nonsense was the moment she started walking. Back to this guy. "I don't know what is going on here, but I have this house for two weeks." "So do I." He put the remains of the sandwich in the trash. "That's not possible. Julie lent it to me," Amy said. "I don't know who Julie is, but I rented it from Sam." And therein lay the problem. "Oh my God," Amy said immediately. Sam was Julie's sister, and together, they'd taken over the family lake house when their parents moved to a high-rise condominium in Dallas. The Kleinhoffs weren't ready to give the place up-it still made for a great family staycation spot-but they didn't like it sitting idle, either. Julie and Sam decided to list it on all the vacation house rental websites in the new year. But Amy seemed to remember that Julie and Sam had argued about it, because Sam felt like they were leaving money on the table by waiting until the new year. Sam apparently had jumped the gun. "I'll get Sam on the phone right now, and we'll clear this up," the guy said, and pulled a phone from his shorts pocket. "No, I'll get Julie on the phone, and we'll clear this up." Amy grabbed her phone from the pocket of her robe. And then she and the man stood there, phones drawn, staring at each other. "Who is Julie?" he asked after a moment. "Sam's sister." He stared some more. His brows dipped. "Are you suggesting that there has been some miscommunication in booking?" "Obviously." She pulled up Julie's contact and hit the call button. "Great," he said, punching something into his phone. "Sam and I had a nice chat about Byron Nelson." "Who's that?" Amy asked. The man gave her a withering look, put his phone to his ear, and walked out of the kitchen. By now, Amy's call had rolled to voicemail. "Julie!" she hissed into the phone, and glanced over her shoulder to make sure he wasn't listening. "Where are you? You need to call me-" The man was suddenly in front of her. "As soon as you can," she quickly added, and hung up. "What?" "Sam's not answering, and her voicemail is full." That tracked. Julie often complained about her sister not answering and having a full inbox. "What about you?" he asked, nodding to the phone she was gripping. "Not answering," Amy admitted. "Well. Here we are." He lowered his phone. So did Amy. He slid it back into his pocket. So did Amy. "We've got ourselves a problem," he added unnecessarily, then bit into her apple. "Not really," Amy said. "There's a resort up the road where you can probably get a room." "Funny," he said. "I meant it's a problem for you. I've paid in full for this place." He took another healthy bite of her apple. That was the moment Amy thought she might have to fight him. She considered her options and found them all lacking, and therefore resorted to throwing a fit. "I'm not leaving." "Neither am I." She braced her hands against the marble kitchen bar. "Look, Mr. . . . ?" "Neely." "Mr. Neely. I need this. Do you know how long it's been since I had alone time? Before my first son was born, seventeen years ago, that's when. I finally get a chance to do what I love-" "What's that?" Amy paused. "What's what?" "What do you love?" She felt a little ridiculous saying it, but who was this guy to her? "I'm an artist. A painter. Anyway, I have a show coming up, and I need to paint, and I need to be creative, and in order to be creative, I need space and alone time. Therefore, I need you to leave." "Huh," he said, and put the apple core on the countertop like a Neanderthal. "Well here's the thing, Mrs. . . . ?"
| Réf. | 001-9780451492418 |
|---|---|
| EAN | 9780451492418 |
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