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Australian Reader's Digest Select Editions: Jacquot and the Angel / The Hard Way / The Undomestic Goddess / False Impression (2007)

by Reader's Digest

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Jacquot and the Angel: Martin O'Brien
Provence, with its sunbaked lavender fields and lovely picturesque towns, is the backdrop for a murder that baffles Daniel Jacquot of the Cavaillon crime squad. The truth, deeply buried, goes back to events that happened during the war. It takes the arrival of a visitor with extraordinary memory powers to help Jacquot to a breakthrough.

The Hard Way: Lee Child
It starts one hot night in New York. Jack Reacher is sipping espresso outside a cafe when a stranger tells him he's just witnessed the handover of a large ransom. And a wealthy businessman, Edward Lane, wants Reacher to help to find the kidnap victims. By the time it's clear that Lane has his own dark nerves, Reacher is in way too deep to change his mind.

The Undomestic Goddess: Sophie Kinsella
When Samantha Sweeting realizes she has made a horrendous mistake that is about to cost her law firm 50 million pounds, she panics and runs away. She ends up in the Cotswolds and, after a bit of fibbing, is employed as a housekeeper. If only she knew how to cook, this English rural retreat would be the perfect place to hide...

False Impression: Jeffrey Archer
Archer's new novel, drawing on his personal interest in art and collecting, is a typically inventive story with a neat twist in the tail. Settle back and enjoy the ride as you're whisked across the world to New York, Bucharest and Tokyo, in the footsteps of a young art historian trying bravely to outwit a powerful and ruthless collector.
  rajendran | Aug 12, 2008 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Digest, Reader'sprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Archer, Jeffreysecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Child, Leesecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Kinsella, Sophiesecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
O'Brien, Martinsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
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Australia - 2007
Do not combine with the edition that contains Marley and Me instead of The Undomestic Goddess .
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