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The Fixer Upper

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The Fixer Upper by Judith Arnold released on Jul 12, 2005 is available now for purchase.

384 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published July 1, 2005

6 people are currently reading
56 people want to read

About the author

Judith Arnold

183 books173 followers
Barbara Keiler
aka Ariel Berk, Thea Frederick, Judith Arnold

Barbara Keiler was born on April 7th. She started telling stories before shecould write. She was four when her sister, Carolyn, stuffed a crayon intoher hand and taught her the alphabet, and she's been writing ever since.

Barbara is a graduate of Smith College, where she learned to aim for thestars, and she received a master's degree in creative writing from BrownUniversity, where she took aim at a good-looking graduate student in thechemistry department and wound up marrying him. She says: "Before myhusband and I were married, I had a job in California and he was working onhis Ph.D. in Rhode Island. I became ill, and he hopped on a plane and flewacross the country to be with me. Neither of us had any money, but he saidhe simply couldn't concentrate on his research, knowing I was three thousandmiles away and facing a serious health problem all by myself. He stayed fortwo weeks, until I was pretty well recovered. That he would just drop whathe was doing, put his life on hold and race to my side told me how much heloved me. After that, I knew this was the man I wanted to marry."

Barbara has received writing fellowships from the Shubert Foundation and theNational Endowment for the Arts, and has taught at colleges and universitiesaround the country. She has also written several plays that have beenprofessionally staged at regional theaters in San Francisco, Washington, D.C.,Connecticut and off-off-Broadway.

Since her first romance novel's publication in 1983 as Ariel Berk. Shewrote one novel as Thea Frederick, and since 1985 she writes asJudith Arnold. Barbara has sold more than 70 novels, with eight millioncopies in print worldwide. She has recently signed a contract with MIRABooks. Her first MIRA novel will appear in 2001. She has received severalawards from Romantic Times Magazine, including awards for the Best HarlequinAmerican Romance of the Year, Best Harlequin Superromance of the Year, BestSeries Romantic Novel of the Year and a Lifetime Achievement Certificate ofMerit for Innovative Series Romance. She has also been a finalist for theGolden Medallion Award and the RITA Award for Romance Writer of America. Hernovel Barefoot in the Grass has appeared on the recommended reading listsdistributed by cancer support services at several hospitals.

Barbara lives in a small town not far from Boston, Massachusetts, New England with her husband, two teenage sons, and a guinea pig named Wilbur. Her sister Carolyn died of breast cancer in 1998.

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5 stars
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4 stars
14 (20%)
3 stars
29 (43%)
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7 (10%)
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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
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87 reviews21 followers
February 3, 2020
Actually a 3.5 star book. Really cute watching Ned and Libby fall in love and following all of the surrounding action. I enjoyed this book.
6 reviews
June 16, 2010
Unfortunately, it is all too true that people will employ all sorts of
techniques to get their children into the "right" school. This book
gives you a lighthearted but not too far from the truth story about what
people will do to accomplish that.

It also gives you a burgeoning romantic relationship that evolves along with a delightful widowed husband and the divorced admissions officer as
a result of his son applying for admission the the school.

An easy read with more than an ounce of truth.
3,339 reviews42 followers
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May 10, 2015
This was a new author for me and I enjoyed this very much - even went so far to see if there might be a sequel to this. I enjoyed the very human and down-to-earth aspect of the characters, even if Libby's melt-down seemed a bit over the top to me. (when Reva goes downtown without permission). Nonetheless a quick and entertaining read.
1,604 reviews
August 23, 2010
I thought it would be fun to read "A Manhattan Love Story" when I went to NY, but it wasn't a love story at all. It was just dumb. The only reason I finished it was because I wanted to see what happened to the daughter.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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