The Ballroom Girls Hit the Big Time

£8.99

Order
Online

Click &
Collect

Free Local
Delivery

Author: Holmes, Jenny

Historical romance

Published on 15 August 2024 by Transworld Publishers Ltd (Penguin (Transworld)) in the United Kingdom.

Paperback | 384 pages
126 x 197 x 27 | 262g

'Live for the day' is the motto for the times, and our girls plan to waltz their worries away...

Ever-ambitious Sylvia wants more from her life, so starts planning a Dance Weekend at the Winter Gardens – not easy in wartime when air raids could cancel an event at the last minute. What she doesn't expect is for the competition to bring the dashing Vernon into her life too! Could everything finally fall into place for Sylvia?Joy's life has entirely turned around in the last year. Newly married to her beloved Tommy and at the helm of her family's business in Manchester, she can't believe how far she's come. But will the plight of her young employee Mildred throw things off course? Or will she and Tommy still be able to perfect their waltz in time for the competition?Pearl is still longing for her darling Bernie to return from the war. Dancing is the best way to distract herself from her worries, so she throws herself into rehearsing the jive with handsome GI partner Errol. But as tongues begin to wag, will the ballroom still provide the solace she needs?As the war wears on, can the Ballroom Girls really hit the big time?The third book in heart-warming THE BALLROOM GIRLS seriesPraise for Jenny Holmes and The Ballroom Girls series'Full of drama, romance and the thrill of dancing . . . a heartwarming and uplifting story' Lancashire Post'Anyone who recalls dancing at the Blackpool Tower Ballroom . . . will love this latest romance' Choice Magazine'Vivid characters, sparkling dialogue and a lively, heartwarming story' Vicki Beeby, author of The Ops Room Girls'Definitely a book sure to please lovers of WW2 romance' Lizzie Lane, author of The Tobacco Girls'A story vibrant with the atmosphere of the time and fuelled by the power of duty and friendship' Peterborough Telegraph