Sea Swept
Number 1 in Series
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4.2 • 23 Ratings
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- £5.49
Publisher Description
After years of reckless independence and fast living, Cameron Quinn is called home to help care for his adopted brother Seth, a troubled young boy not unlike Cameron once was. Cameron's life changes overnight, and he has to learn to live with his brothers once again.
Old rivalries and new resentments flare between the Quinn boys as they try to set aside their differences for Seth's sake. Only Seth's fate is in the hands of a tough but beautiful social worker. She alone has the power to bring the Quinns together- or tear them apart...
Other books in this series are RISING TIDES and INNER HARBOUR. And find out what happens to the now grown-up Seth in CHESAPEAKE BLUE.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Roberts's Dream trilogy involved three women living in a palatial Big Sur mansion. This, the first volume of the Quinn Brothers trilogy, revolves around a trio of strapping, lusty guys in a comfortable home on Maryland's Eastern Shore. Cameron Quinn--the eldest of three abused boys adopted by Ray and Stella Quinn--is an adventurer who likes fast boats, fast cars and undemanding women. After Ray is injured in a car accident, Cam flies to his father's deathbed where he promises to look after 10-year-old Seth, for whom Ray has just started adoption proceedings. Anna Spinelli, Seth's social worker, is taken with both Cam's incomparable body and his big heart. Anna brings her own history of abuse to steamy encounters and the reader knows that Cam's pedal-to-the-metal days are numbered. Roberts is one of the great propagandists for family values, home, hearth and children, making them goals that are rewarding and desirable.
Customer Reviews
Sea Swept
Norah Roberts at her very best-
Rising Tide
This is my favourite of the four Quinn Brothers novels. The storyline keeps you reading as the plot thickens with a variety of characters being introduced. The family ties are strong even though they are not related. Each book focuses on one of the brothers who have very different characters. Cameron's character was the one I liked the best, along with the social worker he develops a relationship with. A highly recommend read!