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Apr 1, 1916 — Nov 25, 1982· 66 yrs

FICTION · LARGE TYPE

Norma Newcomb

6
BOOKS
4.0
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Mary DuBose Garrard (born 1937) is an American art historian and emerita professor at American University. She is recognized as "one of the founders of feminist art theory" and is particularly known for her work on the Baroque painter Artemisia Gentileschi.

The world is what it is; men who are nothing, who allow themselves to become nothing, have no place in it.

— from A Bend in the River

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#1

A Bend in the River

4.0 (1)

"You can't run forever!" were the words ringing in Gerry Dorsett's ears when she fled the horror of her life in New York to seek a new beginning in a small Montana town. She had handed her heart, her hopes and dreams—the most complete and intimate gift she could make—to the man she loved, her boss, Don Ragsdale. But when Don rejected her to marry for money and left her to take the blame for his shady business dealings, Gerry wanted to withdraw from the human race. Would her new life in Big Sky bring her the happiness she sought? And would there be a Prince Charming for her? Gerry wasn't certain whether she could ever trust a man again.

#2

Brownstone angel

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#3

Eve's Hour

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When Eve Barkwell decided to accept Lois Hill's challenge to battle, in which the first skirmish was to be a "scrappy-cat" race on the waters of Maryland's Eastern Shore, the citizens of Sather called her a foolish girl who had a tiger by the tail. For Eve was an easygoing watchmaker in her father's jewelry store, while Lois' father owned a national drug firm and the Hills were the first summer family of Sather. Yet Eve had certain advantages: a reputation for honest work, a reputation for being the first to give anyone a helping hand in an emergency, a reputation for courage and kindness. Therefore the all-out war, of which the sailing contest was only a symbol and a precursor, promised to be dramatic and prolonged, with very high stakes.

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