This is a hackneyed romance novel, so of course everything works out all right, but Jane has a VERY jerkass boyfriend and VERY overbearing iceberg mother, the latter of whom dies in the end, repenting on her death bed. You may not want to read the, "it's okay, she loved you all along!" thing.
Jane has a messed-up relationship to food and her body/weight, which her mother constantly nags her over. This book has her lose weight because of the power of true love.
Michael is somewhat ageless; Jane goes from childhood to adulthood, while he remains in his thirties. I can't call it an age gap, exactly, but it may squick nevertheless, since their relationship was originally more familial.
It's also... kinda Christian? The question over whether Michael is an angel is never really answered, but there are periodic softball "there's a plan for everything," going to church and praying sort of Christianity. It's pretty toothless.
Content Warnings
Jane has a messed-up relationship to food and her body/weight, which her mother constantly nags her over. This book has her lose weight because of the power of true love.
Michael is somewhat ageless; Jane goes from childhood to adulthood, while he remains in his thirties. I can't call it an age gap, exactly, but it may squick nevertheless, since their relationship was originally more familial.
It's also... kinda Christian? The question over whether Michael is an angel is never really answered, but there are periodic softball "there's a plan for everything," going to church and praying sort of Christianity. It's pretty toothless.