Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - A Perfect Stranger (Titanic, Bk 1)

A Perfect Stranger (Titanic, Bk 1)
A Perfect Stranger - Titanic, Bk 1
Author: Anne Robins
IN HIS ARMS  — The Castle Walk, the Peabody, and the Lambeth Stroll– dancer Isabel Golightly could do them all and never miss a step. She’s the toast of the Titanic, and the center of attention in its most elegant ballroom. The swells don’t have to know that she and her little daughter aren’t traveling in first class,...  more »
Info icon
ISBN-13: 9780821776995
ISBN-10: 0821776991
Publication Date: 2004
Pages: 352
Rating:
  • Currently 3/5 Stars.
 3

3 stars, based on 3 ratings
Publisher: Zebra Books
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

Catspaw avatar reviewed A Perfect Stranger (Titanic, Bk 1) on
Helpful Score: 2
In 1912, panic is rampant as the mighty Titanic begins sinking into the sea. Wealthy American Loretta Linden tries to help Isabel Golightly and her six-year-old daughter Eunice gets into a lifeboat, but it took a handsome stranger to get the females safely off the doomed vessel. The three women manage to reach New York while the casualty list grows everyday and the dead exceeds the available coffins. Isobel wonders if that kind stranger died rescuing others.
Miss Linden takes Isabel and Eunice to San Francisco with her when they meet their rescuer Somerset Fitzroy. As Isabel struggles to adapt to the modern American world that her kind patron provides for her, the precocious and intelligent Eunice loves the new environs. Meanwhile Somerset begins courting Isabel, but she wants him to remain a friend while he wants a family with her, her daughter, and future Fitzroys.

This engaging historical romance provides insight to readers at a momentous time when the suffragette's movement is taken hold with simple changes in women's lifestyle. Readers will get a taste of a technological boom with new gizmos like telephones and cars, etc changing the way people communicate and relate. The characters are well written as the difference between mother and daughter show the generational chasm. Although the romance is fun to follow that plot takes a back seat to the marvel of pre World War I America.
Read All 1 Book Reviews of "A Perfect Stranger Titanic Bk 1"


Genres: