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Cornish Clay #0

A Safe Haven

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Sussex, 1763: As young widow Sarah Huxley celebrates her 21st birthday at the family seat of her uncle, Lord Endor, the festivities are interrupted by an uninvited guest: the notorious pirate Black Robbie, along with his crew.

By the time Robbie has collected his spoils from the partygoers, it becomes clear to Sarah that he is no common cutthroat, and she is irresistibly drawn towards him, just as he is towards her.

So when Sarah discovers that her uncle has chosen for her a second – and undesired – husband, she finds in Robbie an unlikely saviour, as he helps her escape, taking her with him to sea.

On their return to Britain, now very much in love, Sarah and Robbie settle near the Lizard Coast in Cornwall. But as ghosts from their past threaten to encircle them both, they must endure their troubles in order to earn the safe haven they so desperately seek.

A touching tale of a love that endures against all odds, Rowena Summer’s A Safe Haven is a must read, perfect for fans of Katie Flynn, Rosie Goodwin and Lyn Andrews

403 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 1, 1996

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18 people want to read

About the author

Rowena Summers

39 books19 followers
Jean Innes was born on 8 February 1932 in London, England, but she have lived in the West Country almost all her life. She married with Geoff Saunders, her childhood sweetheart, and they have three grown up children. She lived in Weston-Super-Mare, Somerset, where she wrote full time. She passed away on 3 August 2011, after contracting an illness, after being rushed to Weston General Hospital.

Jean began her career as a magazine writer and had published around 600 short stories. She start to published gothic romance novels under her married name Jean Saunders and her maiden name Jean Innes in the 1970s. In 1980s, she created, to wrote historical romances, two pseudonyms, her most popular, Rowena Summers and Sally Blake. In 1991 her novel, "The Bannister Girls," was shortlisted for the Romantic Novel of Year award. In 2004, she began to used the penname Rachel Moore.

She was an active member and enthusiast of Swanwick, the Writers' Summer School, which takes place in Derbyshire, England, every August, she was a committee member several times, and also Vice-Chairman. She was elected the seventeenth Chairman (1993-1995) of the Romantic Novelists' Association. As a member of the Romance Writers of America she had given talks at conferences in various venues of the USA. She was a member of the Crime Writers' Association. She also was a member and past committee member of the West Country Writers' Association.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Shirley Hamlod.
1,116 reviews7 followers
March 11, 2020
This is an enjoyable tale of adventure on the high seas. Robbie and Sarah’s story is interesting and exciting. I was mildly disappointed with the ending as I felt it needed an epilogue to satisfy y need to know how they got on.
Profile Image for Emma Young.
72 reviews
September 16, 2020
I thought this was intriguing and adventurous story. It is a tale of piracy, love and adventure on the sea.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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