Margins
No Place Too Far book cover
No Place Too Far
1990
First Published
3.01
Average Rating
190
Number of Pages

Kathy had been warned "The man's light years ahead of you in sophistication, and a hell of a lot tougher than you'll ever be." That might have been the case when Kathy Townsend was an unworldly girl of eighteen, on her own in Auckland and overwhelmed and flattered by the attention of the great Andre Hunter. Then, her head had been filled with romantic dreams. It certainly wasn't true now. Kathy had made a good life for her daughter and herself and she wasn't going to let a ghost from the past destroy it. Even if that ghost was the father of her child ...and now her nearest neighbor.

Avg Rating
3.01
Number of Ratings
113
5 STARS
4%
4 STARS
29%
3 STARS
40%
2 STARS
16%
1 STARS
11%
goodreads

Author

Robyn Donald
Author · 87 books

Robyn was born on 1940 in Northland, New Zealand. She was the oldest child in her family, and as a child, she thrilled her four sisters and one brother with bloodcurdling adventure tales, usually very like the latest book she'd borrowed from the library. Robyn owes her writing career to two illnesses. The first was a younger sister's flu. She was living with her husband and Robyn and spent most of that winter acquiring, suffering, and recovering from various infections. One day she croaked that she had read everything on Robyn's bookshelves, so would Robyn please buy her something cheerful and sustaining. Robyn found three paperbacks- one Mills and Boon Modern Romance novel and a couple of other romances. Robyn read them, too, of course, and so enjoyed them she spent the next couple of years hunting down more Mills and Boon books. This was much more difficult then than it is today, so she decided to write her own, and for the following busy 10 years she wrote and hoped that one day she would finish a manuscript good enough that was good enough to send to a publisher. The second illness was her husband's, and it was bad a heart attack. He was so young it terrified them all. While he was recovering, he suggested that Robyn finish the manuscript she was writing and send it off. It wasn't a perfect manuscript, but the doctor had said to humour her husband, so she finished the manuscript, edited it as best she could, and sent it off. Three months later, she was astounded to read a letter from the editor saying that if She made a few revisions they would buy her novel Bride at Whangatapu. Published since 1977, Robyn sees her readers as intelligent women who insist on accurate backgrounds, so she spends time researching as well as writing.Robyn Donald sometimes thinks that writing is much like gardening. It's a similar process creating landscapes for the mind and emotions from the seeds of ideas and dreams and images. Both activities can also lead to moments of extreme delight, moments of total despair, and backache.Now Robyn lives in the Bay Islands. She continues writing, and also finds time for a very supportive husband, two adult children and their partners, a granddaughter and her mother, not to mention the member of the family that keeps her fit - a loud, cheerful, and ruthlessly determined "almost" Labradordog.

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