02062cam a2200421 i 45000010011000000030006000110050017000170080041000340100015000750200018000900200018001080350022001260400037001480500026001850820016002111000039002272450039002662500024003052640043003293000024003723360022003963370026004183380024004445200771004686500034012396500033012736500039013066500026013456500036013716500026014076500027014336500023014606500034014836500024015176510040015416550029015816550030016101151604265OCoLC20201222124640.0200422s2020 nyu 000 1 eng d a2020006746 a9781250256928 a9781250273970 a(OCoLC)1151604265 aDLCbengerdacTXNdOCLCOdRIOSL00aPS3570.R587bH45 202000a813/.542231 aAndrews, Mary Kay,d1954-eauthor.10aHello, summer /cMary Kay Andrews. aFirst U.S. edition. 1aNew York :bSt. Martin's Press,c2020. a472 pages ;c25 cm. atext2rdacontent. aunmediated2rdamedia. avolume2rdacarrier. aAfter ten years of hard work, Conley is about to take a fancy new position at a New York City newspaper. Then she discovers that her new job is suddenly gone, disappearing overnight along with her dreams of a bright future in a big city. With a sinking feeling in her gut, Conley ends up in the last place she ever wanted to be: The Beacon, a small town newspaper. The paper is now reluctantly run by her brother Garret, whose own dreams of being a lawyer were put on hold with the death of their father. Covering a sleepy beach town with church news and the local funeral home director dictating the day’s obituaries to her over the phone isn’t exactly every reporter’s dream, and to make matters worse, she and her brother see eye to eye on almost nothing.  0aNewspaper employeesvFiction. 0aWomen journalistsvFiction.  0aReporters and reportingvFiction.  0aHomecomingvFiction.  0aBrothers and sistersvFiction.  0aJournalistsvFiction. 0aSmall citiesvFiction. 0aVeteransvFiction. 0aPoliticiansxDeathvFiction.  0aFamiliesvFiction.  0aFlorida Panhandle (Fla.)vFiction.  7aRomance fiction.2lcgft. 7aDomestic fiction.2lcgft