These comments are a sample of reviews posted by readers of Love To Dream.
A worthwhile way to spend time: A well written love story which takes us into the hearts and minds of the lovers. This tale–where love resolves differences–was topped off by a satisfying ending.
JoAnn Ainsworth.
A better than average romance with a some very well-developed secondary characters (the mothers of the groom and particularly of the bride were standouts, but the heroine’s boss and the butler were well-drawn too). The setup in the early chapters was engaging – the mystery in the heroine’s background was believable, even for the 21st century. The marriage of convenience plot has been done before, but the details of settings, characterizations and very dry humor raises this novel above the crowd. I read it in one sitting and thoroughly enjoyed myself!
Lou Philips
Kudos to Ginny Vermillion on her book. It was well written in that it flowed well, was believable yet stirred the imagination, and kept my interest. Thank you for keeping me up each night until I finished it!
Anne Ramspott
“Sizzle sex.” that’s what theyour back cover promised; that’s what your readers got. My lady friend who gave me the book said. “If I were a man, I’d get turned on.” I’m a man, and I indeed got turned on. Finished the book in one sitting. Does that say I enjoyed Dare to Dream? You bet it does. Ginny Vermillion’s literary “voice ” in Dare to Dream is brazenly sexy and raunchy. Her tale lies just this side of pornography, but to her everlasting credit, she never crossed the line. Her characters are strong. She paints her principals, Callie Ann and Ryan Sullivan, with the skill of a 21st century baroque master. The story line is a titillating maze of human emotions right up the the final paragraph, which ends with a two-Kleenex issue box of romantic sentimantality. I am 90 years old. Who says a nonagenarian can’t enjoy a lusty “sexy sizzler”?
Adrian Delfino