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Anne Hampson

    Anne Hampson was a prolific author whose works often explored themes of love and resilience. Despite challenging early life circumstances, she never forgot her ambitions to teach and write. Later in life, after overcoming significant hardships, she achieved both dreams. Her extensive body of work, comprising over 125 novels published by various imprints, garnered immense popularity. She was known for her ability to craft compelling romance narratives that resonated with readers globally, earning her recognition and status as a top-selling author in the genre.

    Chateau in the Palms
    South of the Moon
    Temple of the Dawn
    Hills of Kalamata
    Gates of Steel
    Stormy the Way
    • 2007

      Legacy of Hate

      • 316 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      Set against the backdrop of the seventeenth-century Isle of Man, the story follows Eleanor, who is captured by the pirate Edward Christian. Initially fearing for her life, she becomes entwined in the fierce conflict between the Christian clan and the Stanleys, the island's powerful lords. Through a forced marriage, personal trials, and the turmoil of the Civil War, Eleanor's enduring love ultimately leads her to happiness and the defeat of tyranny on her beloved island. Anne Hampson vividly brings this tumultuous period to life.

      Legacy of Hate
    • 2007

      The Dead Can't Kill

      • 351 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      The first crime novel from a much-loved romance authorSally Renshaw never knew the reclusive James Devlin so she has no idea why he should have left her a legacy. Nor has she any reason to fear the invitation to travel to Hazeldene Manor along with five other beneficiaries. But when a guest dies, it rouses the suspicion of her companion her aunt, PI Louisa Hooke and the two women embark on a search for the truth behind this unexpected inheritance.

      The Dead Can't Kill
    • 1981

      Gates of Steel

      • 192 pages
      • 7 hours of reading
      3.1(119)Add rating

      Librarian note: an alternate cover for this edition can be found here.Helen Stewart was disenchanted with the whole idea of love and romance, while Leon Petrou, it was said, had no time for women -- so when he suggested that she should marry him, to provide a background for his small niece and nephew, she agreed, feeling that emotion would not enter into the situation at all. And that could prove to be a dangerous assumption.

      Gates of Steel
    • 1976

      Hills of Kalamata

      • 191 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      Kidnap Greek businessman Charon Drakos? The outrageous plan was basically weak Sarah Gilmore thought, but she felt obliged to help her girlfriend. As with so many well-laid plans, it backfired. It was Sarah who was kidnapped, and whisked off to Charon's grim, fortresslike home in a remote and primitive part of Greece. Her spirited resistance seemed only to amuse him. "Whether you like my kisses or not," he informed her arrogantly, "you're going to accept them. You are my wife, Sarah; and in Greece marriage is permanent."

      Hills of Kalamata
    • 1973
    • 1973

      Stormy the Way

      • 192 pages
      • 7 hours of reading
      3.2(93)Add rating

      Librarian's Alternate cover edition of ISBN 0373705344."Wanted, good-looking young man to perform simple task. Few hours only. Generous remuneration."When Ricky had blandly jilted her in order to make a more advantageous marriage and had then had the nerve to invite her to the wedding, Tara was determined, for pride's sake, to go, but equally determined not to be an object of pity. So she had advertised for a bogus "fiance" to accompany her to the wedding - and in the devastingly handsome young Greek, Paul Dorkas, found exactly what she was looking for.It was only when Paul's stern older brother Leon, domineering and with the worst possible opinion of Englishwomen and their morals, got mixed up in it all that Tara realised what deep waters she was getting into!

      Stormy the Way