SOMETIMES SIZE DOES MATTER
Belinda Gordon thought she had it all—a great job, wonderful friends, a home of her own. She’s even come to love her voluptuous body. But she still can’t shake the feeling that something is missing. And then Carter Lancaster, aka Her Biggest Mistake, shows up in town, as irresistible as ever, and shakes up her entire world.
WHEN IT COMES TO LOVE
Carter never expected to find Belinda in town, looking as delicious as the day he married her five years ago—before she walked out on him after six weeks and a painful misunderstanding that included his baby daughter, Ruby. A quick divorce is the sensible option—but Carter can’t let Belinda go now, not when he can see the family they could be. Love may be a curveball, but this time he’s going to prove to Belinda that he can hit it out of the park…
Other books in the Perfect Fit series:
This book got me thinking when I received it last week. How much does the main characters’ appearance matter. I think we’d be naive to think it doesn’t. We live in a society that glorifies beauty. But how much that play into selecting a book? I’d appreciate if you’d candidly answer the short poll below. Thanks in advance. 🙂
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This sounds really good I love the title
I own Dangerous Curves ahead and i love it, i guess i have alot of catching up to do now that i know theres more books to read 🙂
As a curvy girl, I love novels where the heroine is curvy as well. She becomes more relatable. Not every person is main stream gorgeous, and I feel too many characters these days reflect a narrow portion of our society. Diversity in character development and plot points are what reel me in.
I agree, Brittany. It is nice to read a book where the hero or heroine is not a “picture perfect” cover model. Often it drives me crazy when reading it in a book. Especially when the author repeats how gorgeous this character is.
I’ve heard a lot about these books. Glad that they are getting some attention.
main characters’ appearance matters but is the story is good- I quickly forget it and focus on the story and characters themselves.
Jamie saw Alec (from Julie Garwood’s The Bride) as ugly, probably b’cos of the circumstances of their meeting and her being sheltered. That didnt stop me from loving the book. Till, date , its still my favorite Historical Romance (Jamie Fraser who??).
Jayne Ann Krentz/Amanda Quick H/H weren’t described as beautiful, it was their heart, mind, courage that made them the Heroes of the story and not their appearance.
A good author makes her/his characters shine .
Interesting titles
These all sound good. cute covers
No one is perfect, so I wouldn’t mind reading stories about imperfect people. Sugar is a new author for me.