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Mary Burchell

    Ida Cook fue una prolífica autora cuya carrera literaria abarcó una considerable cantidad de novelas románticas publicadas bajo el seudónimo de Mary Burchell. Sus obras exploraron frecuentemente temas románticos que resonaron en una amplia audiencia. Cook también fue cofundadora y presidenta de la Romantic Novelists' Association, realizando contribuciones significativas al género. Más allá de sus actividades literarias, Cook se involucró en esfuerzos humanitarios junto a su hermana, demostrando un profundo compromiso con la justicia social.

    Ein Kreis schließt sich
    Das Engagement in Paris
    Spiel mit dem Feuer
    Jenseits der Blauen Berge
    Safe Passage
    With All My Worldly Goods
    • With All My Worldly Goods

      • 192 páginas
      • 7 horas de lectura

      Leonora Culpane found herself transported from having almost nothing in her puse to the heights of unimaginable wealth. And even more incredible, a grim and unknown guardian had been given authority over her. Lora found it difficult to believe she was an heiress, but she would have traded every penny to have her father back! But, if the fortune brought with it excitement, pleasure and luxury, it also brought bewilderment, doubt, and - most astonishingly - real danger. Most important, can it bring lasting happiness?

      With All My Worldly Goods
      3,0
    • Safe Passage

      • 287 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      Gala opera evenings, sudden wealth, and dangerous undercover missions into Nazi Germany define the extraordinary lives of Ida and Louise Cook—two ordinary Englishwomen from a quiet London suburb. Their journey began in 1923 when a chance hearing of an aria from Madame Butterfly ignited a passion that led to both personal joy and the rescue of numerous Jews facing persecution. This memoir, first published in 1950, recounts the sisters' inspiring adventures during World War II, showcasing their zest for life and genuine goodness that endeared them to leading opera singers of their time. Despite Ida's success as a romance novelist, the sisters remained committed to their values of thrift, hard work, self-sacrifice, and moral conviction. They made their own clothes, traveled third class, and bought the cheapest opera tickets, directing all their resources, courage, and ingenuity toward saving lives from Hitler's death camps. Uplifting and charming, this account serves as a powerful testament to what can be achieved through conscience and compassion in a collapsing world.

      Safe Passage
      3,8