FREE NINA JONES AND THE TEMPLE OF GLOOM PDF

Julie Cohen | 384 pages | 17 Jan 2012 | Headline Publishing Group | 9780755341412 | English | London, United Kingdom Getting Away With It by Julie Cohen - book review

Sign In. Edit and the Temple of Doom Indiana Jones Kate Capshaw Willie Scott Ke Huy Quan Short Round Amrish Puri Mola Ram Roshan Seth Captain Blumburtt Roy Chiao Lao Che David Yip Wu Han Ric Young Kao Kan Chua Kah Joo Chen Rex Ngui Maitre d' Philip Tan Weber Akio Mitamura Chinese Pilot Michael Yama Chinese Co-Pilot D. Shaman Dharmadasa Kuruppu Chieftain Stany De Silva Sajnu Ruby de Mel Village Woman as D. Denawake Iranganie Serasinghe Village Woman as I. Serasinghe Dharshana Panangala Village Child Raj Singh Little Maharaja Frank Olegario Merchant 1 Ahmed El Shenawi Sacrifice Victim Pat Roach Chief Guard Moti Makan Guard Mellan Mitchell Temple Guard Bhasker Patel Temple Guard Arjun Pandher Dancer Maureen Bacchus Dancer Corinne Barton Dancer Carol Beddington Dancer as Carol Bebbington Sharon Boone Dancer Elizabeth Burville Dancer Marisa Campbell Dancer Christine Cartwright Dancer Andrea Chance Dancer Jan Colton Dancer Louise Dalgleish Dancer Lorraine Doyle Dancer Vanessa Fieldwright Dancer Brenda Glassman Dancer Elaine Gough Dancer Sue Hadleigh Dancer Sarah-Jane Hassell Dancer Samantha Hughes Dancer Julie Kirk Dancer Deirdre Laird Dancer Vicki McDonald Dancer Nina McMahon Dancer Julia Marstand Dancer Gaynor Martine Dancer Lisa Mulidore Dancer Dawn Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom Dancer Rebekkah Sekyi Dancer Clare Smalley Dancer Lee Sprintall Dancer Jenny Turnock Dancer Ruth Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom Dancer Rest of cast listed alphabetically: Yash Agnihotri Palace Guard uncredited Dickey Beer Nightclub Guest uncredited Sidney Ganis Missionary uncredited Billy Horrigan Thuggee in Railway Chase uncredited Kathleen Kennedy Slave children uncredited Alex Klaus Slave Child uncredited Katie Leigh Little Maharaja voice uncredited Patrick Loh Triad Henchman uncredited Missionary uncredited Tress MacNeille Slave Child voice uncredited Frank Marshall Tourist at Airport uncredited Anthony Powell Missionary uncredited Tourist at Airport uncredited Guy Standeven Probert Mike Quinn Hammerman Karen Harding Pat Fitzsimmons Tom Parker Kennedy Jane Bay Lucas Annie Berardini Ford Ceri Evans Marshall Cristi Janaki Rathod Spielberg Susan Trembly Watts Janet Willis Edit page. Steven Spielberg. Share this page:. Clear your history. Indiana Jones. Willie Scott. Chattar Lal as Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom Seth. Captain Blumburtt. Village Woman as Ruby De Mel. Little Maharaja. Merchant 2 as Ahmed El-Shenawi. Eel Eater as Art Repola. Sacrifice Victim. Triad Henchman uncredited. Tourist at Airport uncredited. Julie Cohen Books - Hachette Australia

Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read. Want to Read saving…. Want to Read Currently Reading Read. Other editions. Enlarge cover. Error rating book. Refresh and try again. Open Preview See a Problem? Details if other :. Thanks for telling us about the problem. Return to Book Page. Get your teeth into this devilishly racy romantic adventure that's full of surprises! All work and no play makes Nina a dull girl But when you're PA to a celebrity chef who's even tastier than one of his delicious dishes you can't help loving your job. And what's wrong with fancying the pants Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom your boss? Erm, everything if he's married to someone else. So when Nina me Get your teeth into this devilishly racy romantic adventure that's full of surprises! So when Nina meets sexy Spaniard Juan, she's thrilled to escape to a new life abroad Nina has no choice but to head home and brave 'The Temple of Gloom' - a gothic flat with some unusual inhabitants. Nina's had enough of bloodsuckers. But is her mysterious neighbour Viktor really a vampire? Get A Copy. Paperbackpages. Published January 17th by Little Black Dress first published More Details Other Editions 3. Friend Reviews. To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up. To ask other readers questions about Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloomplease sign up. Be the first to ask a question about Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom Jones and the Temple of Gloom. Lists with This Book. Community Reviews. Showing Average rating 3. Rating details. More filters. Sort order. Start your review of Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom. Aug 07, RLA rated it really liked it. I just love the title of this book! Julie Cohen is truly a master when it comes to story telling, and this is another brilliant book from her. Nina is everything I like in a heroine; she's confident, sometimes overly confident, full of chutzpah, a little bit of a control freak, prone to moments of impulsiveness, and always looking for something more in her life. Call me cruel, but I enjoyed reading about life kicking her about a bit! It made this book feel real, and Nina wallows, winges, and feel I just love the title of this book! It made this book feel real, and Nina wallows, winges, and feels sorry for herself like any person would before attempting to rebuild her life. The story has a wonderful pace and flows beautifully, it grips you right from the start. The heroine goes on a journey, learns a few lessons and Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom out the other end stronger and a better person. Exactly the kind of Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom I love to read. Full of humour, darkness, and a little touch of love Dec 26, Alexa rated it it was amazing. I loved this, one of my Julie Cohen favourites. I would have liked it even more if it had an epilogue. Good stuff. Sep 08, Namratha rated it liked it Shelves: chick-lit. First of all…Brilliant Title. I love stuff that does a smack-dab job of wordplay. But said handsome, charismatic is boss First of all…Brilliant Title. But said handsome, charismatic is boss is married…no, make that…. So, when a handsome and slightly cheesy Spaniard chef called Juan starts dishing out a lot Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom attention, Nina decides to allow herself to be swept away on a wave of cloying romanticism. In an uncharacteristic move; she sells her flat, gathers up her savings, gives up her high-flying job and a suddenly interested Edmund and moves to Spain with Juan. She decides to plunge herself into the Spanish way of life while helping Juan renovate a derelict restaurant called El Flor Anaranjado. As she battles with her depression, Nina has to deal with sinister gargoyles, inquisitive and yet kindly neighbours and a possible and extremely hot- looking vampire called Viktor. The book was loads of fun. However she displays sparks of cheekiness and resilience that makes her wholly likeable. I would highly recommend this book to Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom chick-lit fans. Mar 03, Deborah Ideiosepius rated it it was ok. Oh dear. I was in the market for a Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom of chicklit, not having read any for a while. Started off Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom, I liked the main character — she had a bit of character, even if her life revolved around her job and her crush on her married boss. The family absent and social scene minimal added interest and I was all set to enjoy some nice fluff fiction. Then it went wrong for me; So she kisses her boss-who-is-married, is horrified, flees her job and runs into the arms of another guy. She then pe Oh dear. She then persuades the guy to chuck over his life because she is too much of a whimp to change her life on her own without a male backup? Not doable. I was not in the mood for a story of a guy having his life screwed over by Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom self righteous liar. Is this chiklit these days? The last one I read was about a succubus who sent her lovers to hell, and she still had better morals and ethics than Nina in this story. Might try it again one day. Having posted the above, I went and read some of the goodreads reviews. This was positive as it assured me that, rather than Nina screwing over some poor guy, he actually screws her over as she richly deserves. I also read that one person felt the book separated into three 'sections' with Spain being the middle one. So I went back and read the final section without bothering with the middle part. This was quite entertaining; I liked the house, characters and story line. I got occasionally annoyed by Nina's idiocy but that was much easier to bear if you think of her as being in breakdown. So I liked the last bit but it still only rates two stars since I had to skip the entire middle of the book. View 1 comment. May 12, Sarah rated it really liked it Shelves: read-infor-review-read. Nina has a slight problem, she has fallen in love with her boss - who just happens to be a very happily married man. Desperate to move on she jumps into starting a new life with Juan, moving to a country where she doesn't know anyone and can't even speak the language. When things go horribly wrong she is left homeless and without a penny to her name and takes refuge in the flat of a deceased family member. It isn't going to be easy to start her life over again but perhaps she'll be able to do it Nina has a slight problem, she has fallen in love with her boss - who just happens to be a very happily married man. It isn't going to be easy to start her life over again but perhaps she'll be able to do it with the help of her new friends. Nina is a very likeable main character and I found it very easy to relate to the position she found herself in. So as much as you are mentally screaming at Nina not to jump into things with Juan while you're reading what she does is completely believable and even understandable in the circumstances. Although I couldn't see what she did in either her boss or Juan I loved Vicktor and could definitely see the attraction there! I enjoyed watching Nina turn her life around and would definitely recommend this book to romance fans. If you're looking for a light entertaining read that will have you laugh out loud you should definitely give this a try. View 2 Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom. Oct 28, Goddess Of Blah rated it it was amazing. Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom - Julie Cohen - Google книги

Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom on:. Julie Cohen's latest book is a different creature to her previous novels. It's not just that it's longer, although the length allows for more characterisation and trickier, Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom plots than her Little Black Dress books, but it also feels different in style. There's the same quirky side that Julie writes so well - the heroine this time is a stunt woman, some Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom ice cream flavours Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom there's some interesting crop-circle action! But the book feels more serious - more grown up somehow - yet just as readable and compelling as her previous stories have been. So, the story basics in a nutshell are that Liza ran away from her home, a quiet little English village, years ago and she escaped to LA for the thrills and spills of a life as a stunt woman. However, when things get a little bit too dangerous she finds herself heading back home to her twin sister. When she gets there she finds that Lee, her twin, has run away. Liza is left to cope with their ailing mother, the Haven ice cream business, and Lee's rather gorgeous boyfriend. Rather than telling everyone who she is straight away, she inadvertently finds herself pretending to be Lee and discovers that she rather likes being the good twin for once. As with Nina Jones and the Temple of GloomNina Jones and the Temple of Gloom found that I didn't like the heroine to begin with, although I was drawn to her sister Lee, which pretty much parallels how things are Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom life for these two characters. By the way, I almost typed 'real life' then, just so you know how involved I get in these books! But the more I got to know about Liza, the more I understood her and loved her. Equally I began to feel differently about Lee, seeing through the nice-girl facade and no longer feeling sorry for her because she had such a bad twin sister to put up with, but because she hadn't been living her life honestly. Both twins have been lying; both feeling isolated and unfulfilled. There's plenty of humour in the situation of Liza pretending to be her twin, living her life for her, and you can see how easily the book could have turned into a comedic romp, yet it's so cleverly and realistically balanced. Overriding the fun of mistaken identity is an emotional journey for Liza as she discovers the truth about her sister's life and begins to face up to the realities of her own identity - the person she's been running away from, and the person she actually is or wants to be. The cutesy, butterfly-strewn cover belies the true nature of Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom book, which is about more important things that girly shopping quandaries as fun as they can be. This is a story with heart and happiness, but also has a deep and moving sadness to it too. How can it not, when at the heart of the novel is a mother with Alzheimer's? The story walks a fine line, moving carefully between the moments of humour and the moments of anger, frustration and desperate sadness that arise from having a family member with this condition, perhaps especially so because it's their mother. Mother-daughter relationships are almost always complicated anyway, even without the added difficulties that Alzheimer's creates. Some of the most awkward, touching moments I felt were between Liza and her mother, real lump-in-the-throat moments. Reading the book felt like watching a really good movie - one of those movies that magically weaves sadness and happiness together, so that you know you've been moved and taken to some pretty dark places, but you still come away happy and hopeful. Actually, it's crying out to be made into a film - with Liza's stunt action, the cinematic scenes around the stone circle in her home village, not to mention the car chase at the end - I want to be able to tell you more about the story, because there are such sweet moments, and little twists and funny observations, but there's so much I can't say without spoiling it for you. You'll just have to read it for yourself! Getting Away With It is a book about family and identity, about both losing and finding yourself, about running away and coming home. The last three chapters are an absolutely perfect roller coaster mix of awful, heartbreaking sadness, mad-dash action and satisfying, romantic resolution. I can't wait for her next book! Further reading suggestion: If you've Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom read any of Julie Cohen's books before, then it's worth going back to read her earlier stories, including Nina Jones and the Temple of Gloom. You might also like to try Anybody Out There? Please share on: FacebookTwitter and Instagram. Just send us an email and we'll put the best up on the site. Page actions Review Discussion More Tools. Personal tools Log in. Categories Fiction Non-fiction Children's books Authors. We Buy Books. Category: Women's Fiction. Reviewer: Ruth Ng. Summary: Wonderfully woven, a powerful and cinematic story that I found very moving. Date: October