Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Sleepless Nights

Rate this book
Sarah set off for an adventure, armed with a new hair colour - blonde! Neal Kennedy was a perfect Prince Charming. He'd made it clear he would welcome an affair but could she risk her heart?

283 pages, Hardcover Large Print

First published January 1, 1999

5 people are currently reading
12 people want to read

About the author

Anne Weale

218 books49 followers
Jay Blakeney
aka Anne Weale, Andrea Blake

Jay Blakeney was born on Juny 20, 1929. Her great-grandfather was a well-known writer on moral theology, so perhaps she inherited her writing gene from him. She was "talking stories" to herself long before she could read. When she was still at school, she sold her first short stories to a woman's magazine and she feels she was destined to write. Decided to became a writer, she started writing for newspapers and magazines.

At 21, Jay was a newspaper reporter with a career plan, but the man she was wildly in love with announced that he was off to the other side of the world. He thought they should either marry or say goodbye. She always believed that true love could last a lifetime, and she felt that wonderful men were much harder to find than good jobs, so she put her career on hold. What a wise decision it was! She felt that new young women seem less inclined to risk everything for love than her generation.

Together they traveled the world. If she hadn't spent part of her bridal year living on the edge of a jungle in Malaysia, she might never have become a romance writer. That isolated house, and the perils of the state of emergency that existed in the country at that time, gave her a background and plot ideally suited to a genre she had never read until she came across some romances in the library of a country club they sometimes visited. She can write about love with the even stronger conviction that comes from experience.

When they returned to Europe, Jay resumed her career as a journalist, writing her first romance in her spare time. She sold her first novel as Anne Weale to Mills and Boon in 1955 at the age of 24. At 30, with seven books published, she "retired" to have a baby and become a full-time writer. She raised a delightful son, David, who is as adventurous as his father. Her husband and son have even climbed in the Andes and the Himalayas, giving her lots of ideas for stories. When she retired from reporting, her fiction income -- a combination of amounts earned as a Mills & Boon author and writing for magazines such as Woman's Illustrated, which serialized the work of authors -- exceed 1,000 pounds a year.

She was a founding member of the The Romantic Novelists' Association. In 2002 she published her last novel, in total, she wrote 88 novels. She also wrote under the pseudonym Andrea Blake. She loved setting her novels in exotic parts of the world, but specially in The Caribbean and in her beloved Spain. Since 1989, Jay spent most of the winter months in a very small "pueblo" in the backwoods of Spain. During years, she visited some villages, and from each she have borrowed some feature - a fountain, a street, a plaza, a picturesque old house - to create some places like Valdecarrasca, that is wholly imaginary and yet typical of the part of rural Spain she knew best. She loved walking, reading, sketching, sewing (curtains and slipcovers) and doing needlepoint, gardening, entertaining friends, visiting art galleries and museums, writing letters, surfing the Net, traveling in search of exciting locations for future books, eating delicious food and drinking good wine, cataloguing her books.

She wrote a regular website review column for The Bookseller from 1998 to 2004, before starting her own blog Bookworm on the Net. At the time of her death, on October 24, 2007, she was working on her autobiography "88 Heroes... 1 Mr. Right".

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
2 (16%)
4 stars
2 (16%)
3 stars
5 (41%)
2 stars
3 (25%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Naksed.
2,226 reviews
January 3, 2018
Pretty sedate story about a passive, like extremely passive, older woman who has a holiday fling with a commitment-phobe younger man, that suddenly develops into more after both flingbirds return home. I wanted to like it but neither protagonist was very inspiring :(

I didn't really see any change in attitude from the hero who prefers Miss Right Now to Miss Right until the heroine put a dent in his ego by rejecting him, a first for this Casanova! And I don't think the heroine is ready to assert herself. After a lifetime of getting pushed around by father, mother, son, and best friend, hero is now added to the list and given priority in pushing her around.

I like Anne Weale but this was a miss for me.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jane.
1,489 reviews72 followers
January 22, 2017
The story is a simple one. It's a fast read.

If you're looking for something really deep and thought-provoking... Well, then this is not the book for you as it really is simple. Luckily for me it wasn't a case of insta-lust nor insta-love and therefore it was a tad simpler. Although, I have to say, that the feelings developed a bit too soon for my tastes (but hey, I like these things SLOW).

The Book Challengers blog // The Book Challengers Instagram // The Book Challengers Twitter
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.