Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
The Lucky Dress - The perfect feel-good romance for 2020 - cover

We are sorry! The publisher (or author) gave us the instruction to take down this book from our catalog. But please don't worry, you still have more than 500,000 other books you can enjoy!

The Lucky Dress - The perfect feel-good romance for 2020

Aimee Brown

Publisher: Aria

  • 4
  • 47
  • 0

Summary

We all have our lucky dress... an irresistibly hilarious rom-com! 
 
Emi Harrison hasn't been feeling particularly lucky lately. Ever since her ex-fiancée, Jack Cabot, successfully shattered her heart into a million pieces. She's managed to avoid him for a whole year, but all that's about to change at her brother Evan's wedding... 
 
She will have to face Jack, Jack's sister, Jack's parents, and Jack's new girlfriend: a mean girl that just won't quit. What could possibly go wrong? 
 
With her lucky dress on, all bets are off, and maybe Emi will find her happily-ever-after at last? 
 
Perfect for fans of Anna Bell, Jo Watson and Sophie Kinsella. 
 
Praise for The Lucky Dress: 
 
'One of my favorite books this year, maybe even ever' Michelle Harris. 
 
'I was sucked in from the start and pretty much devoured the book' Nikki Newcomb. 
 
'Perfect beach reading book' Danielle Dobson. 
 
'Funny, relatable story' Erin Butler. 
 
'I enjoyed this frothy, funny rom-com and read it in one sitting. Perfect beach read!' Amanda Driver.
Available since: 08/07/2018.

Other books that might interest you

  • Willow's Wedding Vows - A Laugh out Loud romantic comedy with a twist! - cover

    Willow's Wedding Vows - A Laugh...

    Debbie Viggiano

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Wedding vows have never been this personal…Willow has been living with marriage-shy Charlie for more years than she cares to remember and is old-fashioned enough to want a wedding band and a loads-of-sex honeymoon before stretchmarks and nipple shields. So when the once-wary Charlie surprisingly goes down on one knee, Willow doesn't question why her boyfriend is suddenly so keen to rush her into saying “I do”. The first clue comes as Willow is zipped into her Cinderella dress, the second as she bobs into the wedding car, and the third as the Roller swings towards its fairy-tale destination… leaving a shell-shocked Willow desperately trying to figure out what to do next.
    Show book
  • Officer 666 - cover

    Officer 666

    Barton Wood Currie

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Bored with his life as a wealthy businessman's only son, Travers Gladwin learns of a plot by a renowned art burglar to rob his house, so rather than thwart the planned burglary, he borrows a police uniform from a friend and decides to confront the robber by posing as an officer. When the burglar arrives at the house, he tries to pass himself off as Travers Gladwin. From there, things only get more complicated, including the arrival of the burglar's girlfriend who believes that her beau is the wealthy man's son. Comical and timely, the book was made into a movie multiple times, each hugely successful. (Summary by Roger Melin)
    Show book
  • Fun Stories For Your Drive Home - cover

    Fun Stories For Your Drive Home

    R. Scott Murphy

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    R. Scott Murphy, the madcap mind behind the popular tracks "Chick-fil-A Makes Me Feel Like Leonardo DiCaprio", "Shamefully Suggestive City Names", and "I'm the Freakin' Michael Phelps of Googling", rFriends, Seinfeld, The Office, and The Far Side, the Fun Stories series offers amusing audio-books, albums, and Kindle selections to help lighten your day.
    
    Sample fun:
    
    Important Questions: What breakfast cereal mascots belong in the hall of fame?
    True Confessions: Why R. Scott Murphy is a Cub Scout dropout
    Celebrity Solutions: How George Clooney can help you with one of life's newest challenges
    Useful Tips: Why ordering two buffets instead of one is sometimes a good move
    Cautionary Tales: Things go horribly wrong when Scott coaches four-year-old soccer
    Eye-Openers: How Scott's former coworker earned the nickname “Crazy”
    Your average daily commute now clocks in at a record 52 minutes (Census Bureau). Your total yearly commute time is now more than nine days. Scott says that's longer than some celebrity marriages. Listen to the Fun Stories series of audiobooks and let Scott liven up your commute and workday.An Author's Republic audio production.
    Show book
  • Adrian Mole - Celebrating 50 Years of Adrian Mole - cover

    Adrian Mole - Celebrating 50...

    Sue Townsend

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Finally given the heave-ho by Pandora, Adrian Mole finds himself in the situation of living with the love-of-his-life as she goes about shacking up with other men. Worse, as he slides down the employment ladder, from deskbound civil servant in Oxford to part-time washer-upper in Soho, he finds that critical reception for his epic novel, Lo! The Flat Hills of My Homeland, is not quite as he might have hoped.
    Show book
  • What's the Number for 911? - America's Wackiest 911 Calls - cover

    What's the Number for 911? -...

    Leland Gregory

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    911 Dispatch: "911, what's your emergency?" Caller: "What were the winning numbers for the Evening Pick Four today?"Lauded as the "911 poster child" by Katie Couric, former Saturday Night Live writer Leland Gregory takes us back to where the funny all began.From presidential philosophizing and political pandering to foolish felons and office idiots, Leland Gregory generates side-splitting laughter by chronicling the worst of human nature. Gregory takes us back to where all the laughs began by updating his 911 cult classic with more than 150 new tales of bizarre but true 911 calls such as:.911: "Do you know a good stain remover?".911 Report: Person answered "no" to the question: "Are you conscious?".911 Report: Man called and requested dispatcher call his wife to let her know he's on his way home and that she shouldn't yell at him.
    Show book
  • The One-Hoss Shay - cover

    The One-Hoss Shay

    Oliver Wendell Holmes

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    This is a small collection of whimsical poems by the American physician and author Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.  "The Deacon's Masterpiece" describes the "logical" outcome of building an object (in this case, a two-wheeled carriage called a shay) that has no weak points.  The economic term "one hoss shay," referring to a certain model of depreciation, derives its name from this poem.  "How the Old Horse Won the Bet" is a lighthearted look at a horse race.  Finally, "The Broomstick Train" is a wonderfully Halloween-y explanation of how an electric tram really works.  (Summary by Laurie Anne Walden)
    Show book