book cover of One Fine Day
 

One Fine Day

(1994)
A novel by

 
 
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR (2013)
USA TODAY BESTSELLING AUTHOR
BARNES & NOBLE BESTSELLING AUTHOR (2013)
RITA AWARD AUTHOR
AMAZON.COM BESTSELLING AUTHOR
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ABOUT THE BOOK:

WOMEN'S FICTION REISSUE

Years after Molly leaves her husband, Austin, for a new life, tragedy calls her back to his side, and both she and Austin get a second chance at love.

SHE THOUGHT SHE COULD ESCAPE THE PAST...
After too many years of heartache, Molly Bennet had packed her bags and run away ... from her memories, her husband, and the woman she had become. But just as she found herself on the brink of a brand-new life, an unexpected tragedy called her home. Now the man who had always been so much stronger than Molly needs her in a way she'd never thought possible....

BUT YOU CAN'T RUN AWAY FROM LOVE...
No woman had ever appealed to Austin the way Molly did; from the day she left, all he knew was emptiness and the ache of losing her. He would have given anything to have her back--but not this way. He didn't want her pity. He couldn't expect her love. Yet as the walls of pride and fear come tumbling down, Austin and Molly will be given a second chance at happiness--if only they have the courage to take it.


This is a romance: it contains sex scenes
Heat rating: 8 out of 10

This is the second of two books. The first is Forever (Forever Young), but One Fine Day easily stands alone. During the early nineties, romance publishers were experimenting with hybrids, books that were a combination of romance and women's fiction. One Fine Day was one of those books.

From the book:

A GUY SHOULD never marry a woman who was in love with someone else. Even if that someone was dead. Especially if that someone was dead.
What had gotten into him? Austin wondered. It wasn't like him to reflect on his relationship with his wife. He'd given up on that years ago.
Home from a stockbrokers conference in Chicago, Austin Bennet swung his silver Mercedes into the driveway. Rain pounded against the car roof; the windshield wipers were unable to keep up with the downpour.
Home.
It felt good to be back, he thought, somewhat surprised.
A long time ago, when their daughter Amy was still a baby, he'd tried to talk his wife into moving to a bigger house in a more upscale neighborhood, away from the youth-oriented university town of La Grange, Iowa, but Molly hadn't been interested, so he'd let it drop.
Now he realized he was glad they hadn't moved. A new house wouldn't have made any difference, wouldn't have changed anything. Molly would have been with him physically, but not in spirit, not in heart.


Genre: Romance

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