About Beautiful Beloved
To have loved and lost, or never to have loved at all?
Alice Browning discovers her fiancé, Robert Everton, stood her up on the night of her graduation, to spend the night with another girl. She ends her engagement to Robert, who was only interested in her for her money. From now on she will be much more discerning when it comes to choosing a groom. No man will again know about her inheritance – she is merely nurse Browning. Alice breaks away on a holiday with her aunt to the small town of Arundel where she once again encounters the handsome stranger she briefly met in the city.
The handsome Oliver Howard is the adopted son of Sir and Lady Howard of Stanton Estate in Arundel. He is a young, attractive, and very successful cardiologist. But Oliver will never open his heart to love, because Stanton Manor and the people living in this glorious mansion still hide the secret of his lineage – and some secrets of their own. Aunt Emily hates Oliver and she had banned Oliver from the manor. Oliver has not returned to Stanton Manor in twelve years. But now Uncle William is dying of cancer, and Oliver’s chances to find the answers to his lineage are getting slimmer with each passing day as he tries to find his answers hidden inside the manor which he may not enter.
The sparks immediately fly between Oliver and Alice. Oliver thinks of Alice as a pretty, empty-headed form of entertainment, and Alice is tired of men treating her like a fool.
Oliver can never offer his love to a girl when he doesn’t even know who he is… He is a man without a name. Alice learns the most unexpected thing that can happen in life is love, and it is very possible to love that one wrong person.
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From Jane Austen to Toni Morrison, one can find the most romantic and beautiful literary quotes. I am sure classic literature quotes about love will never be old-fashioned! My ultimate dream is to one day also be quoted alongside these remarkable writers.
I am a South African female of 48-years old. I grew up in a time when everything explicit was highly censored and love was still sweet and dreamy – I prefer it that way. I have always dreamed of writing but always lacked the courage (I became a nurse, it was the "sensible" thing to do). Now I am taking that leap, at last, for the first time!
The old classic romances still make us all believe in, or at least dream of, true everlasting love. I hope to write classic romance novels for the 21st century. I prefer plot-driven novels. And what is a romance novel without an element of magic to it or if it can't take one to another world or time, whether real or imaginary?