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pages_and_procrastination 's review for:
One More for Christmas
by Sarah Morgan
emotional
funny
hopeful
inspiring
lighthearted
medium-paced
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
Yes
Diverse cast of characters:
No
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
*I was given a digital galley of this title, free, in exchange for my honest opinion.
Morgan has a way of pulling you into her stories. It's combination of making her characters come to life, flawed and imperfect as if they were real people and placing the story in a setting that makes you wish you could be there. Every Morgan book I've read so far have been Christmas-themed. And she makes it s magical and makes me even more excited about the upcoming holidays. I also love the way she handles romances. While it's not usually the main focus of the story, she writes it in such a way that you're rooting for it even when the odds are against it. One thing that usually bothers me is the rapidly falling in love the at happens frequently in romances/contemporaries.. It's annoying when characters confuse lust with love . They often lack history -or the sense of it- with each other. It seems like 2 people meet have sex and then fall madly in love. Even when the characters say "It feels like I've known you forever" it usually doesn't read that way. I've never had that problem with Morgan's books. Perhaps that's because she sets the foundation up and leaves it with a future relationship on the cusp of potential- we get to envision how the relationship unfurls, creating our own happily ever afters.
Morgan has a way of pulling you into her stories. It's combination of making her characters come to life, flawed and imperfect as if they were real people and placing the story in a setting that makes you wish you could be there. Every Morgan book I've read so far have been Christmas-themed. And she makes it s magical and makes me even more excited about the upcoming holidays. I also love the way she handles romances. While it's not usually the main focus of the story, she writes it in such a way that you're rooting for it even when the odds are against it. One thing that usually bothers me is the rapidly falling in love the at happens frequently in romances/contemporaries.. It's annoying when characters confuse lust with love . They often lack history -or the sense of it- with each other. It seems like 2 people meet have sex and then fall madly in love. Even when the characters say "It feels like I've known you forever" it usually doesn't read that way. I've never had that problem with Morgan's books. Perhaps that's because she sets the foundation up and leaves it with a future relationship on the cusp of potential- we get to envision how the relationship unfurls, creating our own happily ever afters.