‘Is there really such a thing as a perfect proposal?
Praise for Holly Martin
{"em"=>["Over the next hundred days I intend to find out. I will find one hundred ways to propose to our Chief Proposer Suzie McKenzie and post the results here for your enjoyment. One thing’s for sure, not one of my proposals will be on top of the Eiffel Tower with a dozen red roses.’"]}
Best friends Suzie and Harry are partners in romance. That is, they run the.PerfectProposal.com, coming to the aid of would-be grooms to create the ultimate marriage proposal.
But when Harry decides to catapult the business into the big leagues with a PR stunt all Suzie can see is a hundred days of heartbreak stretching ahead of her. But however exotic the location, or breath-takingly romantic the setting, Suzie has to keep remembering that ‘Marry Me?’ is the one question she can’t say yes to.
{"strong"=>["This business proposal should come with one hundred broken heart warnings…"]}
{"strong"=>["One hundred proposals, one hundred chances to say yes."]}
‘Holly Martin writes about life and love with such big-hearted warmth and flair — invite The Guestbook into your home today!’ — Belinda Jones
'One Hundred Proposals is beautifully romantic, riveting, completely irresistible and a story that will make you fall in love with love.' — Victoria Loves Books
'Funny, poignant and riveting as well as romantic. Don't miss The Guestbook! I couldn't get enough of the guests' entries and it's got everything: humour, heartbreak, loss, love.' — I Heart.. Chick Lit 'If you’re going to buy any book then buy this delightful one! The Guestbook is splendid, it is beautiful, it is magical and it will leave you with such a smile on your face!' — Reading in the Sunshine
'an original heart-warming novel which will have you routing for Annie all the way!' — BookBoodle on The Guestbook
'This was honestly, 100% one of the most enjoyable books I have ever read — I devoured it in 2 sittings! Holly’s writing style is so easy and fluent it gets hard to stop, and before you know it you’ve read 200 pages and completely forgot about dinner.' — Jenny In Neverland