She was real, honest and a little on the quirky side, but not ranking too high on the weird scale.Īaron… Now he was trickier to pin down at first, mostly due to his personality needing to not only seep through the pages of the book, but through the means of modern correspondence (i.e. Now it is rare I really like the female leads but I actually liked her. And eventually it did-IM, then traditional once Aaron returned to the States. I personally quite liked it although there came a point with the emails when I was ready to move into something different. Cute? Weird? Annoying? Brilliant? Each to their own. Guestimate-ly (totally a word), about half of the book is told in email format and then through instant messages before switching into traditional narration. After a rocky-road start, Ruby and Aaron build up a friendship through exchanging emails. They ‘meet’ through an organisation that puts in touch willing letter-writers with deployed soldiers. Admittingly, Dear Aaron is only the second book of hers I’ve read but she does it in such a nice manner I’ll gladly grant her the title.ĭear Aaron joins Ruby “Ruby Cube” Santos with Aaron “Soldier Boy” Hall. Mariana Zapata is probably my favourite for slow burn romances. Nice and easy does it…e-ve-ry time? (Yeah, you gotta sing-song it to work it).
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