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Veils of silk

Front Cover
17 Reviews
Onyx, 1992 - Fiction - 400 pages
Laura Cameron thinks she has surpassed her sensual nature behind a facade of Victorian propriety, until she meets the courageous army major Ian Cameron. The golden-eyed Laura offers hope for a new life to Ian after his years of captivity in Central Asia has shattered his dreams. And Ian, in turn, offers her a marriage proposal she dares to say yes to. And so, together, they journey from India's lush plains to its wild mountain passes, struggling to build a marriage unlike any other. Yet the danger and intrigue that surround them are less perilous than the veiled secrets of their own hearts. Only indomitable courage and unshakable love will free them to claim the fiery passion they both fear...and desire.

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Review: Veils of Silk (Silk Trilogy #3)

User Review  - Andi Ruggles - Goodreads

I ended up skimming through the ending to this book - I was extremely frustrated with the heroine and actually a little bored. For a romance novel, this is actually a long and lengthy read. I haven't ... Read full review

Review: Veils of Silk (Silk Trilogy #3)

User Review  - Patricia M - Goodreads

This is the first book by Mary Jo Putney that I read. in addition to strong female characters with a wealth femininity, there is a glorious level of humor-at one point the man indicates that the ... Read full review

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Contents

Section 1
7
Section 2
26
Section 3
37
Copyright

30 other sections not shown

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About the author (1992)

Romance writer Mary Jo Putney was born in New York and graduated from Syracuse University with degrees in English literature and Industrial design. She served as the art editor of The New Internationalist magazine in London and worked as a designer in California before settling in Baltimore, Maryland in 1980 to run her own freelance graphic design business Her first novel was a traditional Regency romance, which sold in one week. Signet liked the novel so much that it offered Putney a three-book contract. In 1987 that first novel, The Diabolical Baron, was published. Since then, she has published more than twenty-nine books. Her books have been ranked on the national bestseller lists of the New York Times, USA Today, and Publishers Weekly. Most of her books have been historical romance. She has also begun writing fantasy romance and romantic fantasy. Putney has won the Romance Writers of America RITA Award twice, for Dancing on the Wind and The Rake and the Reformer and has been a RITA finalist nine times. She is on the Romance Writers of America Honor Roll for bestselling authors, and has been awarded two Romantic Times Career Achievement Awards and four Golden Leaf Awards. Her titles include: Dark Mirror, Dark Passage, No Longer a Gentleman, Never Less than a Lady, and Nowhere Near Respectable.

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