Liz Fielding

Liz Fielding

I've been reading since I was knee-high to a gnat. My mother taught me, the way she taught me all the good things in life. She read to me when I was little and then she bought me books of my own. Little Women, What Katy Did and Anne of Green Gables. I read them all until the covers fell off.

It was a habit I passed on to my own...more »
  • Carmarthenshire, Wales, UK
  • member since Sunday, July 22 2007

Profile: Reviews

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  • Ain't She Sweet?
    • Rated 0 stars

    I'm a huge fan of Susan Elizabeth Phillips but it took me three attempts to get past the first chapter of Ain't She Sweet. The heroine is not instantly likeable although it was obvious she was going to make an impact. I think perhaps it was the realisation of just how much she was going to have to go through to make it to her hea that held me back.

    Last week, celebrating the acceptance of my own latest book, I finally sat down with Ain't She Sweet and read it in two huge gulps. The heroine, Sugar, who had been Home Coming queen and leader of her generation at school, had tormented - horribly - a girl unable to fight back, ruined the career of her English teacher and dumped her sweetheart to run off with a football player. Broke, desperate, and with three marriages behind her she returns home in search of painting that may or may not exist, that will restore her fortune. The English teacher -- a wonderful English hero called Colin -- now owns her family home and the girl whose life she spent her childhood ruining, is now the town's leading light -- oh, and she married Sugar's sweetheart.

    Sugar is put through every shade of indignity and humiliation by the people she hurt. She's forced to work as Colin's housekeeper, serve the women she humiliated and let down, work for the daughter of her mother's black housekeeper. But she's a trooper and her courage reduces Colin admiration.

    But this story isn't just about Sugar's redemption. A lot of people find their way in this book and the scene with the water sprinkler had me screaming with laughter.

    Loved it, loved it, loved it!

    Liz Fielding wrote this review Saturday, July 5 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Natural Born Charmer
    • Rated 0 stars

    A howlingly funny opening, but plenty of dark emotional moments, too. SEP always delivers the goods.

    Liz Fielding wrote this review Saturday, September 1 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Billionaire On Her Doorstep (Harlequin Romance)
    • Rated 0 stars

    Fresh, unexpected, a treat.

    Liz Fielding wrote this review Thursday, August 30 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Anyone But You (Hqn Romance)
    • Rated 0 stars

    I read this on a train and laughed so much I nearly fell off my seat.

    Liz Fielding wrote this review Thursday, August 23 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Vintage Babes
    • Rated 0 stars

    Great book written by Harlequin veteran Elizabeth Oldfield about a bunch of women who have reached that "trying" age but refusing to give in and act it.

    Liz Fielding wrote this review Tuesday, August 21 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Savage Garden
    • Rated 0 stars

    This was a slow, involving read with so many of my favourite features: gardens, myth, mystery, murder. By the time I reached the last few chapters i couldn't put it down. A really enjoyable read.

    Liz Fielding wrote this review Sunday, August 19 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Creative Habit: Learn It and Use It for Life
    • Rated 0 stars

    This is such an inspirational book for a writer. I just keep going back to chapters on "turning up", "the box" and "the spine". It;'s not that I don't know this stuff, but when the muse is sulking, it helps to have someone lay it all out and get you back to the keyboard. Because, basically, "turning up" is the real biggie!

    Liz Fielding wrote this review Friday, August 17 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Blackberry Winter (Harlequin Next)
    • Rated 0 stars

    This is a five-handkerchief weepy that I couldn't put down. Strong women, difficult men, tough lives well lived. Loved it.

    Liz Fielding wrote this review Wednesday, August 8 2007. ( reply | permalink )


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