A Proper Family Christmas (Transita)

A Proper Family Christmas (Transita)

by JaneGordon-Cumming (Author)

Synopsis

William Shirburn really isn't into Christmas - all that jingly tinselly presenty stuff makes him feel queasy. He'd prefer to spend it alone watching trash with his cat. But, there's an unwritten law that elderly people are not allowed to be left alone at Christmas, especially if they live in a vast old mansion that could be a gold-mine in the right hands - and William's relatives are very keen to ensure that Haseley House does end up in the right hands! Hilary Watlington intends to ignore Christmas altogether. With Daniel away, she won't have to conceal how desperately she still misses Ben. But widows aren't allowed to spend Christmas alone either and it sounds as if William might need her support. Frances, the nanny, was hoping for a break from spoilt little Tobias and his dreary parents, but now she finds they're off to stay with his eccentric grandfather in some spooky old house in the Cotswolds. Can Hilary possibly be starting to have feelings for another man? And does she know the whole truth about the attractive Oliver Leafield? Will Frances overcome the snobbery that threatens to separate her from Daniel? Or learn which of his relatives it is really safe to trust? And whose name is William going to put on the will-form that they're all so keen for him to complete? This particular family Christmas is going to change everybody's lives.

$3.25

Save:$6.77 (68%)

Quantity

3 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 352
Publisher: Transita
Published: 14 Oct 2005

ISBN 10: 1905175191
ISBN 13: 9781905175192

Media Reviews
'Packed with delightful, unforgettable, eccentric characters and written with humour and deep sensitivity.' Katie Fforde
Author Bio
Jane Gordon-Cumming spent the first three years of her life on a Thames barge in a creek in Kent. She was an early reader, and when they moved to a 'real' house, used to make up stories to entertain her sister (now herself a best-selling author) based loosely on the teachers at their South Kensington school. They eventually settled in Wimbledon, in a house with a turret overlooking the All England Club, and Jane attended the High School, envying her sister's more exciting, if less academic, performing arts school. She read Classics at Bedford College, London, but was always more interested in writing and performing satirical sketches and songs. It was after moving to Oxfordshire that Jane began to publish short stories, and in 1982 she and her mother became founder members of the still flourishing Oxford Writers Group. She began a DPhil on landscape history, but discovered she'd rather save her creative energy for fiction. She and her husband were already both 40 when they met, and they ran Easter revision courses together for thirteen years, before deciding it would be less stressful to renovate houses. They work as volunteers with Oxford Archaeology, organise local community activities, and Jane sings in two choirs, leaving little time for their canal boat. Jane's main influences are Wodehouse, Saki, Richmal Crompton, Arthur Ransome and Georgette Heyer, as reflected in this, her first published novel.