 | Barbara Delinsky - Fiction - 2009 - 400 pages
A Barbara Delinsky classic, first published in 1994, For My Daughters is a poignant and unforgettable story of the enduring power of love and the tenacious strength of family ... | |
 | Barbara Delinsky - Fiction - 2009 - 512 pages
New York Times bestselling author Barbara Delinsky weaves a stunning and intricate tapestry of life, love, and acceptance. With their daughters off to college, the time has ... | |
 | Barbara Delinsky - Fiction - 1991 - 576 pages
New York Times bestselling author Barbara Delinsky is known for her evocative, emotionally resonant books. Now, for the first time in hardcover, comes her classic novel A Woman ... | |
 | Barbara Delinsky - Fiction - 2009 - 448 pages
New York Times bestselling author Barbara Delinsky delivers a touching and heartfelt story in which love and devotion are put to the ultimate test, first published in 1996 ... | |
 | Barbara Delinsky - Fiction - 2009 - 496 pages
More Than Friends is a moving, unforgettable story of friendship, love, and forgiveness—a classic from New York Times bestselling author Barbara Delinsky. The Maxwells and the ... | |
 | Barbara Delinsky - Fiction - 1994 - 480 pages
From the New York Times bestselling author of More Than Friends comes an emotionally charged novel that reflects upon the consequences of one irrevocable act. In the idyllic ... | |
 | Barbara Delinsky - Fiction - 2008 - 447 pages
Hearing that his ex-wife, Rachel, is comatose following an automobile accident, architect Jack McGill puts his own troubled life on hold to be with her and his children, and ... | |
 | Barbara Delinsky - Fiction - 2009 - 400 pages
Barbara Delinsky enthralls millions of readers with her gripping, emotionally powerful stories of love and loss, commitment and betrayal, and the strength for survival and ... | |
 | Barbara Delinsky, (None) - Fiction - 2009 - 368 pages
New York Times bestselling author Barbara Delinsky delights with a compelling story of chance, fate, and perfect timing, first published in 1998. Russ Ettinger doesn't know why ... | |
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