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Edition Language: English
Series: Glasbläser-Saga #2
Books Free The American Lady (Glasbläser-Saga #2) Download
The American Lady (Glasbläser-Saga #2) Kindle Edition | Pages: 473 pages
Rating: 4 | 9954 Users | 406 Reviews

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Tempestuous and beautiful Wanda Miles, daughter of Ruth and Stephen Miles (or so she thinks), aspires to more than the life of a debutante, but the trouble is she doesn’t know precisely what she wants. Then her aunt Marie, the family’s renowned glassblower, arrives from Lauscha, Germany, and Wanda decides that learning about her ancestry may hold the key to her future. When Marie accidentally reveals a long-held secret about Wanda’s parents, Wanda goes to Lauscha to unravel the truth.

While Marie finds herself increasingly swept up in New York City’s bohemian social scene—catching the eye of a handsome young Italian in the process—Wanda explores a past she never knew in the village of her mother’s youth—and begins to build a life that she never expected.

A sweeping tale that takes readers from the small town of Lauscha to the skyscrapers of New York and the sun-kissed coast of Italy, The American Lady is a tribute to the enduring power of family and what we’ll do in the name of love.

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Title:The American Lady (Glasbläser-Saga #2)
Author:Petra Durst-Benning
Book Format:Kindle Edition
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 473 pages
Published:March 10th 2015 by AmazonCrossing (first published January 1st 2003)
Categories:Historical. Historical Fiction. Fiction. Romance. Cultural. Germany. Historical Romance. Family

Rating Epithetical Books The American Lady (Glasbläser-Saga #2)
Ratings: 4 From 9954 Users | 406 Reviews

Criticism Epithetical Books The American Lady (Glasbläser-Saga #2)
Read this as a ebook-which made reading this easy to pick up. Enjoyed this #2 book of trilogy Interesting to see how "history repeats itself" in the generations . I found the characters very well described (appearance and demeanor that one could almost create a picture in your mind of who they really were. As the reader you got a sense of the hardships the glassblowers and their families had to endure. Also encouraged by how they did manage to come up with new ways of doing business, create new

HeartwarmingCannot to read the next book, Love this story of the glass blowers...very fast moving a very easy read. Filled with twists and turns. I highly recommend it...

Good sequelI enjoyed this as much as the first book but I'm hoping that some loose ends from the first book do get tied up. I would definitely recommend these books as a good summer read.

The connection I formed with the characters is unlike anything I've ever experienced. It felt as though I was there with them. Celebrating their joy and sobbing at their sorrows and loss. And how I became whenever one was slighted, as though they were friends of mine to protect!Well done, Petra. And on to book 3!

I read The Glassblower. I didn't love it but I enjoyed reading about the glass blowing. I decided to get the second book to see what happened next. I stopped reading it. I really didn't care anymore what happened. I realized that there was not 1 character in the book that I liked. The women in this story are not strong and smart. To me they are selfish and not very nice to each other. The only one with the slightest redeeming quality is the oldest sister, Johanna. I don't know who I hated most

4.5 StarsThe American Lady is a good sequel to The Glassblower. But be prepared to have a hankey close by at the end. I'll admit I didn't see it coming though there were clues here and there. Marie Steinmann is bored and hasn't created a new sketch for her family's glassblowing shop. At 38, she fears that she's all out of ideas. In New York, Wanda Miles is also having trouble finding her way in the world. She doesn't want to be a young wealthy socialite. She wants to make her own path in the

Both the Glassblower and the American Lady were mediocre books. They just missed the Mark of being truly interesting. I enjoy generational books, especially of simply people who struggle through life to become some thing. That is what held my interest in these books. The Steinmann sisters (Johanna, Ruth and Marie) struggle to build their father's glassblowing business after he dies (book 1). In book two we see Johanna married and carrying on with the business, Ruth builds a well to do life in

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