Great character development
This anthology contains the first 3 novels (Chasing Perfect, Almost Perfect, Finding Perfect), and the novella Sister of the Bride. I rated the first and third novels 4 stars, and the second novel and the novella 5 stars.
What all four books share is such wonderful character development I had to read all four within a four day span. I cared for the characters despite problems in the first and last novels.
In Chasing Perfect the first novel, the city treasurer is characterized as weird because he collects action figures and has given over a spare bedroom to Civil War battle reenactment models. The implication is "real" men don't do such things. My other concern is Charity's complete lack of interest in her father and his family. She knows her father was in the military and died, but he was from Fool's Gold, so he must have had local family. Even Marsha, the mayor, knows of Charity's father, but also shows no interest in telling Charity. I find this lack of interest disconcerting.
The second and third novels both drew me in, but use the same trope! The dumb as rocks guys propose because proposing is logical or the right thing to do, without factoring love into the equation. I don't relish this trope, but TWO novels in a row???
Despite my grumblings and misgivings, I greatly enjoyed all four stories, and will read more novels in the series!