

Here Comes Trouble
Author: Debbie Macomber
Narrator: Sarah Grace
Unabridged: 5 hr 35 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Published: 11/20/2012
Author: Debbie Macomber
Narrator: Sarah Grace
Unabridged: 5 hr 35 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Published: 11/20/2012
How many people follow the dream they had as a child growing up? American Women's Fiction and Romance novelist, Debbie Macomber did just that. She realized that it was her dream to become a writer from the time she was in fourth grade. She did not act upon that dream (for fear of rejection) until she was 30 years old, and the mother of four children. She submitted many manuscripts, but all were rejected. She attended a romance writers conference, where one of her manuscripts, Heartsong, was selected to be critiqued by an editor from Harlequin Enterprises, Inc. Of course, that editor ripped her work to shreds with his criticism, and recommended she throw it away! Instead, she gathered the $10 fee and submitted the same manuscript to Harlequin's competitor, Silhouette Books. They published the manuscript, and Macomber's illustrious writing career began in earnest.
Debbie Macomber overcame her dyslexia to become one of the most prolific authors of romance novels. She sat in her kitchen, with four children, tapping out her work on an ordinary typewriter. At her peak writing, she was releasing two or three titles per year, with her first hardcover novel being released in 2001.
Most women today are very familiar with Macomber's current works, especially those that have been made into Hallmark Channel movies and series. The Christmas movies.......Debbie Macomber's Mrs. Miracle, Call Me Mrs. Miracle, and Trading Christmas.....have become iconic Christmas features. The Cedar Cove series was also a hit with not only Debbie Macomber fans, but Hallmark fans in general.
Macomber and her husband raised their four children, and now have grandchildren. They still live in Port Orchard, Washington, but now winter in Florida.
Not the best collection of shorties I've ever read, but it was fair reading for fans of the genre, and made an okay Sunday diversion. 1. There's Something About Christmas (2005) You know what I find romantic? A fellow who can respect "no". This one missed the mark, there. The way Oliver aggressively h......more
There's Something About Christmas had me reading through the night! I absolutely fell in love with this story. If it wasn't for a stressful job which requires a good amount of sleep to function on, I would have finsihed this book in one night. Loved There's Something About Christmas. Perhaps it was......more
When Nolan Adams publishes a column about Maryanne, a spoiled and rich debutante, vivid sparks fly between the twosome. Maryanne does not want to be portrayed as a rich and pampered woman, although rich and pampered is her lifestyle. She lives in a pricey, high class apartment. Her father arranged f......more
One of the reasons that I'm not thrilled when two stories are packaged into one book, is that I find myself comparing the two. That was the case with There's Something About Christmas and Here Comes Trouble. I loved There's Something About Christmas and will eventually try all three of the fruitcake......more
This book includes two stories that loosely have a Christmas theme. In the first, "There's something about Christmas", a reporter who hates fruit cake has to write a story about three nominees for best fruitcake. I'm not a fruitcake lover but these recipes sounded interesting. Ourcreporter was conve......more