Jacob's Girls (Harlequin Superromance, No 661)
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Jacob's Girls (Harlequin Superromance, No 661)

Jacob's Girls (Harlequin Superromance, No 661)
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Jacob's Girls (Harlequin Superromance, No 661)

by Tara Taylor Quinn
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Harlequin (1995-08-01)
ISBN: 0373706618
EAN: 9780373706617
Dewey Decimal #: 813
Paperback: 186 pages
SKU: 4239
Condition: As New
Comments: Binding: Softcover. Condition: As New.


Editorial Reviews


Product Description
DEBBIE MACOMBER'S
The First Man You Meet

Shelly Hansen was horrified when Great Aunt Milly's infamous wedding dress arrived on Friday the thirteenth. Family legend said she'd marry the next man she met. So when she ran into handsome Mark Brady, Shelly told herself -- and him -- that she wasn't interested. But then she started seeing him everywhere. Just coincidence?

TARA TAYLOR QUINN'S
Jacob's Girls

Jacob Ryan has trouble in triplicate! Seven-year-old Allie is organizing her teacher to death. Seven-year-old Jessie is crying in class. Seven-year-old Meggie is becoming almost reclusive. Jacob is told that what the girls need is a women in their lives -- and maybe they do. But the last thing Jacob needs is to exchange girl trouble for . . . women trouble!


Customer Reviews


Mixed Bag - One's A Keeper And One Isn't
Rating (3)
Date: 2001-06-02

6 out of 6 customers found this reveiw helpful


Of the two stories, Tara Taylor Quinn's is the best. I would recommend this book on the strength of that alone. The story about a father raising triplets alone was a change of pace. He is a successful morning DJ and the love interest turns out to be his partner on the show, who is married but whose husband has been missing in the Middle East for the past 5 years. His ex-wife is also involved in the story. Quinn's characters are interesting and have depth. The 7 year old triplets are adorable and not cloying - they seem like real kids, each with her own personality. The romance and its accompanying conflicts are realistic. I've never read anything by her before, but now I'm going to check her books out.

Debbie Macomber's book, on the other hand, was just a bit of fluff. I normally like her books, but this story was just a waste of time. How can you have a legend about a wedding dress when only one person ever wore it before? The main character was supposedly a career-oriented woman, but she fell apart at the receipt of the dress and behaved like a ditzy female, panicking at the thought of "being controlled by fate" and turning down a relationship with a man that anyone else would have grabbed with both hands. I lost patience with her silliness. The hero was rather simplistically defined.

I'd give Quinn's book 4 stars and Macomber's 2 stars, so I averaged it as a 3 star book.

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