Search results for ""Author Joanna Johnson""
HarperCollins Publishers A Marriage To Shock Society
The Earl she shouldn't have metThe wedding that shouldn't have happened!Having lived at the Laycock School for Young Ladies since the day she was born, Emily Townsend thinks she is finally about to meet her father Only to mistakenly arrive at the estate of dashing Andrew Gouldsmith, Earl Breamore, instead! Determined Emily needs access to the ton if she's to resume her search, and Alex needs a convenient wife. But can their unconventionaland surprisingly passionate!marriage survive Society's scrutinous gaze?
£10.45
HarperCollins Publishers Officers Convenient Proposal
Is a wedding on paper... ...the only solution?
£8.88
HarperCollins Publishers Their Inconvenient Yuletide Wedding (Mills & Boon Historical)
A wedding they can’t escape A Christmas they’ll never forget! The last person Samuel Beresford expects to fish out of a freezing, perilous river is Julia Livingston. The girl who was once an outcast in his village is now a woman—and the talk of the Ton for her beauty. His daring rescue compromises them into marriage, but Julia is hesitant to trust anyone from her childhood… Can Samuel prove he’s no longer the boy she knew?
£10.45
HarperCollins Publishers Return Of Her LongLost Husband
A husband's redemption... A second chance at love?
£8.88
Springer Nature Switzerland AG Topographies of Caribbean Writing, Race, and the British Countryside
How do Caribbean writers see the British countryside? Do they feel included, ignored, marginalised? In Topographies of Caribbean Writing, Race, and the British Countryside, Joanna Johnson shows how writers like Derek Walcott, V.S. Naipaul, Jean Rhys, Grace Nichols, Andrea Levy, and Caryl Phillips have very different and unexpected responses to this rural space. Johnson demonstrates how Caribbean writing shows greater complexity and wider significance than accounts and understandings of the British countryside have traditionally admitted; at the same time, close examination of these works illustrates that complexity and ambiguity remain an essential part of these authors’ relationships with the British countrysides of their colonial or postcolonial imaginations. This study examines accepted norms and raises questions about urgent issues of belonging, Britishness, and Commonwealth identity.
£49.49