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A review by georgiewhoissarahdrew
Her Enemy at the Altar by Virginia Heath
4.0
3.5 stars rounded up
Very satisfying traditional HR. HEatA takes well-worn plot devices (the forced marriage, feuding families, PTSD) and makes something fresh and delightful out of them. Connie and Aaron actually talk to each other; each notices the other's virtues (slowly, to be sure) and their coming together feels both hard-worn and satisfying. I'd read this again, and I'll certainly look for others by Virginia Heath.
Very satisfying traditional HR. HEatA takes well-worn plot devices (the forced marriage, feuding families, PTSD) and makes something fresh and delightful out of them. Connie and Aaron actually talk to each other; each notices the other's virtues (slowly, to be sure) and their coming together feels both hard-worn and satisfying. I'd read this again, and I'll certainly look for others by Virginia Heath.