Description Sometimes a match that\'s all wrong, turns out to be Just right.
The resulting article, which started off with a line that included, "Could there be love lurking beneath the murky depths?" won an award from the co.
One February, the assigned student went AWOL and I sat in my last period study hall trying to figure out how I could combine tilapia and Valentine\'s day into an article that would make my mother happy.
The school administrators liked to see articles about the aquaculture project the district had gotten a grant for, but everyone hated writing about the boring, smelly fish.
Slowly, using simple words, Avery explains to the uncouth mountain man--the one with the ferocious, tuba-player-eating dogs--that she can\'t have a party in the barn if he bulldozes it first When circumstances force them to work together, it\'s a race to see who will win first, and if they\'ll give in to the growing feelings between them."Jessie Gussman creates believable characters that you will fall in love with and root for till the very end." - Emily Camp, Author of Running Back AUTHOR INTERVIEWQ: Why do you write?A: I was not on the school newspaper team, but because my mother was the advisor for it, when someone didn\'t turn in their assigned article, I often got selected as a volunteer to fill that spot.
Unfortunately, he has to get past the ugliest cat he has ever seen, which happens to be attached to a little blonde with sparkling pink fingernails, a city-girl attitude, and a fixation on saving the barn he Just contracted to tear down.
In town for a short while to help his sick mother, Gator Franks expects to grab a side job and make some quick cash to help pay her hospital bills.
It will be the highlight of the year, unless the building gets destroyed first.
She plans a throwback Christmas party in the barn where the sick woman got engaged forty years ago.
While waiting to audition for a rare tubist seat opening, Avery Williams intends to cheer up her cancer ridden neighbor.
Description Sometimes a match that\'s all wrong, turns out to be Just right