Irish Thoroughbred

Irish Thoroughbred

Irish Thoroughbred is American author Nora Roberts’s debut novel. The novel was originally published by Silhouette in January 1981 as a category romance. It proved so popular that it was repackaged as a stand-alone romance and reprinted multiple times.

About Irish Thoroughbred in brief

Summary Irish ThoroughbredIrish Thoroughbred is American author Nora Roberts’s debut novel. The novel was originally published by Silhouette in January 1981 as a category romance. It proved so popular that it was repackaged as a stand-alone romance and reprinted multiple times. Roberts drew on her Irish heritage to create an Irish heroine, Adelia \”Dee\” Cunnane. This book’s popularity helped pave the way for other romance authors to experiment with heroes and heroines who had greater economic and emotional parity. Although these novels often describe sexual tension between the main characters, sexual intercourse within the line is only described within the main line within the Silhouettes Romance line in Irish Th thoroughbred number 81 in the 1981 issue of Silhouettes. The book is published in clearly delineated lines, or categories – about 55,000 words – and is required to conform to the general parameters that define the general category.

It was initially published by Harlequin Enterprises, a Canadian company considered the foremost publisher of romance novels in North America. It is now published by Simon & Schuster and is available in hardback, e-book, and Kindle editions for about $24.99. The book was written by Roberts, who was a stay-at-home mother with two small children at the time of the novel’s publication. The story follows the relationship between Irishwoman Adelia\”Dee\’s relationship with American Travis Grant. The couple’s transformation from adversaries to a loving married couple is one of many formulaic elements in the book. In the novel, Dee moves to the United States, where her sick uncle arranges for her to marry his employer, wealthy American horsebreeder TravisGrant.