In truth, awe does not come close.
This is a long book. It is also intense, suspenseful, and at times, frighteningly gory. But then, it tells of a time when men were often brutal, and women were mostly property - cherished perhaps, but still useful primarily as items rather than people.
The author buildsthe suspense and intensity in this story from the very beginning, when we met our heroine (although she is still a bundled babe). The years until she is nearly old enough to wed are more or less skipped, but once there, time sometimes slows so that minutes take pages, and sometimes even skips, so that months go by in a paragraph.
The hero literally bursts onto the scene, when his family rescues/abducts the heroine. Although he is a brutal man, with manners that are frequently crude, it is clear he is not evil, just as she is obviously cursed with the second sight.
The third major player in the story is Loch Awe. By turns it sooths, mystifies, calls, and nearly destroys the protagonists.
The author very carefully builds the story, adding one character at a time, defining their roles relative to each other, and then, allows the characters to take control of their destinies in the way most appropriate for them - although each needs the help of others to achieve the end.
I loved this sweet love story.