

Hero's a moral, righteous dude, which means despite him being pretty A stand up guy I don't really care how he gets fucked and married (see: all previous references to Superman). I think I threw up my hands when the heroine picked a white piece of marble, saying it's "pure and white like the glorious Cause," and I'll just frankly never like her (not to mention it mixes two wars, doesn't it, help me American History friends? But whatever).

The hero is compelling enough, but it really seems like all the growth for her will be because he's such a better person than her.and I can't sayĪnything about the quote/paragraph breaks because I'm too irritated (chalk me up as someone who'd rather read a book w/o quotation marks than this) I'm too heroine centric and she's not going to be my jam. Who's doing the laundry, fixing meals, doing chores, etc? Otherwise, this is a great book. Meg hangs out with Clay (who is sculpting) meanwhile, Clay's siblings are starving. My only caveat is that this is the third Western historical in a row that I've read where the principals didn't seem to have to work much. The romance was almost secondary, but that was fine. Heath does a nice job of explaining the nuances of that decision. The idea of someone objecting to fighting and being branded a coward is unique in Texas historicals (I think), and Ms.

She decides to punish him by having him sculpt a memorial to the town's war dead. Now back in his hometown, he's shunned by all, including Meg Warner, the widow of his best friend who was killed at Gettysburg. Always to Remember has an interesting premise: Clay is a conscientious objector during the Civil War who doesn't want to kill others.

Heath's Regency romances, so I forget that she also writes American Western historicals.
