Something Borrowed, Something Blue is the poets 3rd book. Included here are new poems, work from childhood, essays, interviews and dialogue paraphrased from other sources and poetry penned by others used with permission. The images include those submitted by request of the poet. Much of these works are intensely personal. Themes are life through a gay filter, faith, health and disability, growing up and animals.
Mr. Smith came in minutes later, consulting with Geoffrey for a moment before examining me. He felt inside me with a look of intense concentration. Geoffrey hovered by my side. “What?” I asked. “What's happening?” Mr. Smith told me that ...
Mr. Smith came in minutes later, consulting with Geoffrey for a moment before examining me. He felt inside me with a look of intense concentration. Geoffrey hovered by my side. “What?” I asked. “What's happening?” Mr. Smith told me that ...
Something Borrowed is also very well written---nice, spare prose, which kept me pressing forward, agog to know what happened. This is a book which takes a clear-eyed look at the rivalry that exists in even the best of friendships.
The crime fiction novelist presents his third anthology of short stories with Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blue, a mixed collection bound to please.
Readers will find themselves cheering for Darcy as she proves people can change in this captivating tale."—Booklist (Starred Review) "Darcy is Scarlett O'Hara set in modern day."—Newark Star-Ledger
Editor Monique d'Arcy decides to spotlight four glamorous brides-to-be in Perfect Bride magazine and the media spotlight exposes all four to potential professional disaster and to murder. Reprint.
When Hugo and Jenny were fourteen, they thought nothing could come between them: they reckoned without Jenny's terrifying Aunt Lilian.
Planning a bridal shower from devotions to dessert.
Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Believing her marriage to Andy to be perfect in every way, Ellen runs into former flame Leo and wonders why she has been unable to forget him even though they brought out the worst in each other.