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Wild Weekend

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Oliver Hardcastle scrapes an existence as an organic farmer. Miranda Marlow is a high-earning international town-planner. They may live in the same country but their values and lifestyles are so far apart they could have come from different solar systems. All they have in common is a string of disastrous relationships. Little wonder they have never met. Until one weekend in Suffolk when Miranda and her mother Clare, recently appointed Under-Secretary for Agriculture, are directed to the Manor believing it to be a country house hotel. It is in fact the private home of Ollie's mother, Bel Hardcastle, and a constant drain on her dwindling inheritance. Ollie immediately sees the opportunity to have a litte fun and make a bit of money - and the Marlows' luxury weekend turns into three days of hell at Manor House Hotel. Disasters strike, sparks fly and Miranda and Ollie loathe each other with something very close to passion...

Paperback

First published January 1, 2006

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About the author

Celia Brayfield

29 books12 followers
Celia Brayfield has written four non-fiction books and nine novels of which Mister Fabulous and Friends is currently in development for television. Her novel Heartswap was optioned by Paramount and Harvest for Chrysalis Films. Celia is currently working on a series of historical novels. She also teaches Creative Writing at Bath Spa University and Brunel University.

After attending St Paul's Girls' School in London, Celia went to Grenoble University in France to study French Language and Literature, before moving into journalism at The Times. She has one daughter and lives in Oxfordshire.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Sarah Griffey.
21 reviews
May 15, 2013
Loved the book. A highly visual writing style that brings every scene to life. Well observed characters; and a story of a British city dreamer owning a farm. Full to bursting with village life, spoilt children, tense mother/daughter/success/failure/am-I-good enough? relationships. I certainly couldn't put it down. Highly recommended.
773 reviews2 followers
February 27, 2020
The worst kind of chick lit, no real story, just a lot of disjointed story lines, very improbable!
Profile Image for Jeremy.
235 reviews2 followers
November 11, 2009
I picked this up because it looked to be light hearted and fun and likely to entertain me on the long winter drives between home and the resort town of Possilpark on the north side of Glasgow. I quickly became disappointed with my choice as the characters were developed – our hero: young, successful, rich and bored with the city in his mid 30’s and able to buy a £300k run down farm at an auction because he felt like a change of scene. Our heroine: highly successful, extremely organised good looking and single (you can see where it is going already….). Yuk! Where did the author get her experience of real people? But then we cue in the farming disasters, the government subsidies, the over powering mother figures, political shenanigans and a good dose of teenage angst. And these are mixed with a group of misguided animal lovers with an urban misunderstanding of rural life and the pigs. Oh the pigs……
In essence this is a story of the heart driven by the quirks of families (and mothers) set against a backdrop of rural life and struggling farmers. I have to confess that in the end I felt that it was pretty well structured and the multiple story-lines, although not well hidden, were brought together neatly. I did laugh a lot even though I kept telling myself this is not my sort of book (one of the characters likens the unfolding events to be like being in a Jane Austen novel) and I was held in the car on multiple occasions to finish the segment. I think the voice of Lucy Scott had much to do with this. She delivered the narration very well, capturing the different characters through with different voices that seemed to fit them perfectly. I think this is really important in an audio book. A good story can be overwhelmed by bad narration – and a mediocre story brought to life by good narration
4 reviews
June 23, 2009
Wild Weekend is about Miranda Marlow, who is a high-earning international town-planner and Oliver Hardcastle who is an organic farmer. Miranda Harlow is not looking forward to a weekend with her mother at a country-house hotel, but thanks to a teenage Goth, Miranda tasted a wine at Chateau Saxwold, love finds a way to change Miranda's mind...
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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