Summers are relived in the novels "The Caddie Who Knew Ben Hogan" (Thomas Dunne) by John Coyne, in
Summers are relived in the novels "The Caddie Who Knew Ben Hogan" (Thomas Dunne) by John Coyne, in which a man recalls the summer of 1946, when he was Ben Hogan's caddie at the Chicago Open, and in "The Book of Bright Ideas" (Delta), Sandra Kring's story in which the steamy summer of '61 becomes a memorable one for a young girl in rural Wisconsin when she befriends the unusual little girl whose family moves into town.
"Bad Boys of Summer" (Kensington) offers three novellas, one each by Lori Foster, Erin McCarthy and Amy Garvey, in which a young woman finds summer romance.
In her novel "Sweet Magnolia" (Harlem Moon), Norma L. Jarrett tells her tale of Summer -- Summer Ledoux, that is, the bride whose wedding in New Orleans reunites her with her estranged sister, a fashion model who is Summer's polar opposite.
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