Meg Jardine, personal assistant (PA) to the wealthy and powerful William McMaster, is going to lose her job if she can’t appease her boss. Unfortunately, it’s Christmas, everyone is about to go on holiday, he’s stuck in Australia due to a workers’ strike, and he has no accommodations. Meg invites him to spend the holidays with her family – out in the middle of nowhere on her grandmother’s dairy farm. His attic bedroom (sorry, the internet and the phone are out at the moment) is hardly the sort of thing he’s accustomed to, and tempers flare as the inconveniences pile up. But William finds himself accepting the situation, even enjoying his time on the farm with Meg and her family. And Meg finds herself falling for her boss. It’s an untenable situation, however, and Meg resigns as soon as she realizes she has lost the professional distance that makes their work relationship possible. She informs William that the strike has ended and she can get him on the next flight out, but suddenly he’s no longer so eager to escape.
Well-developed characters and foreign setting (Australia!) make this classic romance stand out. Modern women will appreciate Meg’s strength, intelligence, and determination. Why the guy always has to be powerful and aloof, I can’t figure out. William comes around in the end, though – with plans to marry his love, improve the farm, and adopt his part-time dog (a Christmas gift from Meg’s family). The romance, while present, doesn’t detract from a good story about decent people.