Alison sailed for Australia and New Zealand with adventure in her heart. With a nursing job and a good friend waiting for her, she had no worries at all. But nothing turned out according to plan, and the complications were astounding. How ironic, she thought, that out of the disasters that had befallen her since she'd left England, she'd find the love she'd at first been too blind to see!
Ida Cook was born on 1904 at 37 Croft Avenue, Sunderland, England. With her eldest sister Mary Louise Cook (1901), she attending the Duchess' School in Alnwick. Later the sisters took civil service jobs in London, and developed a passionate interest in opera. The sisters helped 29 jews to escape from the Nazis, funded mainly by Ida's writing. In 1965, the Cook sisters were honored as Righteous Gentiles by the Yad Vashem Martyrs and Heroes Remembrance Authority in Israel.
As Mary Burchell, she published more than 125 romance novels by Mills & Boon since 1936. She also wrote some western novels as James Keene in collaboration with the author Will Cook (aka Frank Peace). In 1950, Ida Cook wrote her autobiography: "We followed our stars". She helped to found the Romantic Novelists' Association, and was its president from 1966 to her death on December 22, 1986.
As a romance, this was spectacularly unsuccessful. There were also some weird, info-dumpy bits on sheep farming, of all things. But once we escaped from the bush, I did enjoy the travelogue of Melbourne and Adelaide.