1930s England. Dinah Treeves has a difficult decision to make. Should she stay in her comfortable marriage to the kindly, older Max, or follow young Naval Officer Piers to Malta?Praise for Ursula ‘Ursula Bloom writes in a delightful way ...’ Cambridge Daily NewsDinah found security and affection in her marriage to Max Hale. But when she meets Piers Grant, she experiences passionate love for the first time. Loyal to Max but drawn to Piers, Dinah is faced with a seemingly impossible choice.As Max confronts Dinah and Piers, he suggests three possible solutions to their dilemma. These three scenarios unfold before the reader, in which we see how each decision would affect the lives in the triangle. Whichever path Dinah chooses will bring unforeseen consequences.TIMELESS CLASSICS WONDER CRUISETHREE SISTERSDINAH'S HUSBANDTHE PAINTED LADYTHE HUNTER'S MOONFRUIT ON THE BOUGHTHREE SONSFACADEFORTY IS BEGINNINGTHE PASSIONATE HEARTNINE LIVESSPRING IN SEPTEMBERLOVELY SHADOWTHE GOLDEN FLAMEMany more titles coming soon.More praise for Ursula ‘… with every book she adds something to her reputation.’ Daily Telegraph
Ursula was born in Essex, but as a child lived in Whitchurch, Warwickshire, where her father, James Harvey Bloom, was the Rector of the village. She went on to write books about his work into their family history.
Ursula published over 500 books in her lifetime, an achievement that once won her recognition in the Guinness Book of Records. She wrote many of her novels under pseudonyms - Sheila Burns, Mary Essex, Rachel Harvey, Deborah Mann, Lozania Prole and Sara Sloane.
Her work was predominantly romantic, although her first book, Tiger, privately printed, was written when she was seven years old. She was encouraged to write by a family friend, a well-known author of the time - Marie Corelli.
Born into the fringes of middle class, with aspirations of grandeur but little money, Ursula became a master of story-telling in her own life - keeping up appearances with an imaginary housemaid because "it would have been a social stigma to do our own work" and pretending to her first husband that she could control the servants and not they her - writing was both an outlet and easy with someone of her imagination and humour.
She married twice - in 1916 to Arthur Brownlow Denham-Cookes, to whom she had one son, Pip, born in 1917, and in 1925 to Charles Gower Robinson.