Synopsis This romantic farce stars Josie Flynn, who has come to New York from London for her cousin's wrongheaded wedding, and also to escape her adulterous husband. She meets another eligible man on the flight--a rock journalist--then loses track of him. The two proceed to seek each other out all over New York in a slapstick comedy of errors. Finally, Josie's husband shows up, repentant, and his path crosses with that of a suddenly valuable duck....
| Details | | Publication Date: | 2002-05-01 |
| Size | | Length: | 344 pages | | Height: | 8.3 in | | Width: | 5.3 in | | Thickness: | 0.8 in | | Weight: | 8.8 oz |
Publisher's Note
After her marriage to Damien ended in disaster, Londoner Josie Flynn -- thirtysomething and single again -- is flying across the ocean to her American cousin's "big mistake" wedding. In her present "love stinks" frame of mind, the last person she expects to be seated next to on the flight is someone like Matt Jarvis. A recently divorced rock journalist, Matt is sensitive, good-looking, and remarkably attentive -- and before their plane touches down, Josie's smitten. So how can she hope to convince her cousin to cut and run when Josie is all ready to leap into love again -- with a stranger, no less, who might be just another Mr. Totally Wrong in Mr. Seductively Right's clothing? The point is rendered moot, of course, once they deplane and she and Matt go their separate ways. After all, Josie's got prenuptial confabs to worry about and that dreaded lilac chiffon bridesmaid's dress to wear. But Dante himself couldn't have dreamed up the hell this wedding is proving to be -- and when her dream hunk reappears and throws himself into the mix, Josie finds herself wondering how she -- or any unattached modern woman, in fact -- can hope to survive the new romantic rules of the twenty-first century. Already a bestseller in the U.K., Carole Matthews's For Better, for Worse is a deliriously droll, dead-on tale of marriage, sex, monogamy, and modern love.
Industry Reviews "[A] cheeky romp from a bestselling Britisher with a great sense of fun." Kirkus Reviews (04/01/2002)
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