Read this years ago and loved it then. Read it again and enjoyed it as much. A very sweet, fun-filled old-skool harlequin.
Kim Forsythe had no idea what she was getting into when she'd decided to give up her secretarial job in Sydney and go live on the twenty acres of plot in the north coast that she'd recently inherited after the death of her late mother's uncle. She had no family and was looking forward to a nice change even though Rafe O'Sullivan, on whose property the plot was situated, claimed that the uncle had made another will leaving the property to him since he'd looked after the ailing old man in his last years. However, as the will hadn't be found they had to go with the old will and Rafe was ready to buy it from her. When they first meet at the solicitor's office in Sydney, Rafe writes Kim off as a city slicker, making an infuriated Kim all the more determined to live on the property. Things get heated between the two of them and it's not only because of the property -- there is instant attraction.
Soon, Kim finds that besides the shabby house with an archaic stove she has also inherited a few livestock, that too, one cow that needed to be milked, which of course she didn't know a thing about, much to Rafe's amusement. When he offers her help, she refuses knowing his thoughts about her as a city-girl. Even though the two keep bickering, he sends his three brothers to help her out. In addition to three brothers, Rafe has two sisters, one married and one sixteen year old. The Sullivans are fun lot and Kim gets along with every one of them except for Rafe who can spike her temper in a heartbeat and also leave her senseless with his kisses.
When the plot gets flooded, the O'Sullivans open their house to her. Before she leaves for her temporarily abode, she finds the will that gives Rafe the right to inherit the twenty-acres. She knows now she has no option but to leave and it saddens her because she's fallen in love with Rafe.
It was amusing how the O'Sullivans, especially, Rick --the next older brother after Rafe-- caught on to the fact that Rafe has permanency on his mind with regard to Kim and how when Rafe was not around and Kim's date, Adam, goes over to the O'Sullivan's place to meet Kim, Rick does his best to keep the two apart by deliberating engaging Adam in inane conversations. He also had me laughing with his covert snickering and teasing when Kim lies to Adam ---about having a fiance in Sydney whom she'd broken up with and now wanted her back--- and also toward the end he and Rafe talk in riddles about Kim getting married before the summer was over and she's trying to figure out what they're up to.
I felt the end was a bit abrupt, but nevertheless it was a good, clean, fun book.