Birmingham Post

Romantic reads for Valentine’s Day...

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THE TRUTHS AND TRIUMPHS S OF GRACE ATHERTON by Anstey Harris

together the lives of these women and their impact on the heir to the throne during his formative years.

THE RULES OF SEEING by Joe Heap

IF YOU missed this debut when it came out last summer, bag your Valentine (or yourself ) a copy so you can see the world differentl­y now.

It tells the story of Nova, an interprete­r for the Metropolit­an Police, who has been blind from birth.

When she undergoes surgery to restore her sight, her journey is just beginning – she now has to face a world in full colour for the first time.

Meanwhile, Kate, a successful architect and wife to Tony, is in hospital after a blow to the head.

There, she meets Nova and what starts as a beautiful friendship soon turns into something more.

I OWE YOU ONE by Sophie Kinsella

ANOTHER clever, witty story of love and empowermen­t sees heroine Fixie Farr save a stranger’s computer from certain disaster in a coffee shop.

The owner, Sebastian, scribbles her an IOU but, of course, she doesn’t intend to call in the favour.

That is, until her teenage crush comes back into her life and needs her help.

There follows a series of IOUs – and Fixie becomes torn between the past she’s used to and the future she deserves.

MY CONEY ISLAND BABY by Billy O’Callaghan

THIS second novel by the Irish author tells the story of Michael and Caitlin, whose long-running affair consists of monthly trysts in the eponymous New York neighbourh­ood.

The pair head off to a dingy by-thehour hotel amid a winter storm as they find out about threats to their relationsh­ip – Caitlin may have to move with her husband’s work, and Michael’s wife is seriously ill. So what do they do? Is the romance doomed?

The plot unfolds amid flashbacks to their earlier lives, which moulded them into who they have become.

SUMMER OF SECRETS by Nikola Scott

THIS unforgetta­ble novel from Nikola Scott, about dark secrets and dangerous romances, centres on two women – born decades apart – each faced with the knowledge that a man in their lives is not what he seems. Perfect for readers of Dinah

Jefferies and Kate Morton.

THE BINDING by Bridget Collins

THIS magical, mysterious tale by an author best known for her young adult fiction, sees farmhand Emmet learning how to bind books.

But it soon becomes apparent that the books he’s binding are trapping people’s best-kept secrets, past deeds and regrets. Then he uncovers a book with his own name on it.

Dark and atmospheri­c – with a seductive love story wound through it – it’s a great one for fireside reading.

LOVE LETTERS OF GREAT MEN edited by Ursula Doyle

FROM the private papers of Mark Twain and Mozart, to those of Robert Browning and Nelson, this book forms a collection of some of the most romantic letters in history.

For some of these great men, love is a ‘delicious poison’ (William Congreve); for others, love can scorch like the heat of the sun (Henry VIII), or penetrate the depths of one’s heart like a cooling rain (Flaubert).

Part of the Macmillan Collector’s Library, this series of stunning, clothbound, pocket-sized classics with gold foiled edges and ribbon markers makes a perfect romantic gift.

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 ??  ?? The bookof love: These 10 titles will be sure to get you in the mood for romance
The bookof love: These 10 titles will be sure to get you in the mood for romance

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