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PRINCE FOR JENNY, A |
List Price: $3.50
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Reviews |
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Rating:  Summary: Fantastic, Tender, Love Story. Review: I absolutely loved this book. Jenny is a fantastic heroine who is very special. Born with down syndrome. She knows that she is different and loves with her heart. She never expects to have the love that her mother has found. She's wrong. Daniel Sullivan falls hard and fast. Daniel is a great hero. He is so Tender and loving to Jenny. He accepts her as she is and never makes her feel different from everyone else. Their love is so Pure and Special that no one, not even Daniel's nasty past can come between them. I highly recommend this book. I wish there were more like it out there.
Rating:  Summary: Too unrealistic, could have been so much more. Review: There is always something special when reading about heroines or heros that are more than less the perfect, especially when dealing with someone who has some disability. In the case of A Prince for Jenny, Webb could have done something great, but instead made the story too perfect from the start and too short (under 300 pages and for the Loveswept line that only fits short stories.) There just wasn't enough of a plot written for it really to matter. Jenny is mentally disabled but is this perfect painter with such loving family and friends. One can believe about the loving people in her life, but her being this prodigy painter for the famous and elite is too fantasy to be true!! And the hero falling for her so quickly is too hard to be believable. The first few pages, Webb shows the hero, Daniel as brooding and being a hard man, spurned by the witchy ex-wife. Then by some feat of a miracle by meeting Jenny, he changes to an overloving and optimistic individual, a 360 to be exact. Everything happened so fast, from the hero falling in love to the courting, to the marriage. Jenny was considered practically perfect except for her mental capacity. Maybe if the story was expanded a bit more, and more realistic, it could have been a gem. Instead the reader rolls their eyes and wishes for the writer to give the audience a little more credit. So close to giving us something worth reading, but not quite yet!
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