How Would Mills And Boon React To this?

 

                                                                                   S.M.Singru

 

 

An engineering firm in Britain, which built a section of Britain’s famous motorway M6, has made a revelation, which was aimed at publicising a new technical feat, but may well result in a literary embarrassment. Apparently, in order to prevent the surface of this motorway from cracking, the firm used some 2.5 million unsold copies of novels published by Mills and Boon. The copies were pulped and then mixed with tarmac, which was finally laid out to make up the M6. This process gave the required quality to the surface, it was claimed. There is no doubt that the Mills and Boon novels generated much more welfare than what the authors could have asked for. Budding writers can now take courage: authoring novels, which do not sell, need not be all that disheartening after all.