Review: A Woman Like Her

A Woman Like Her A Woman Like Her by Marc Levy
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is the fourth Marc Levy book I have read, and I chose it because he wrote it. (Also many of his books are on Kindle Unlimited, which I am trying out for free for three months, so there is that.)

His characters are always quirky, influenced by unknown factors, looking for something more from life. Chloe and Sanji come from very different backgrounds but both are tired of being judged on outward appearances. Both want to be seen, valued, for who they are.

Chloe is a young white woman in a wheelchair. People stare at her, ignore her, speak down to her.
Sanji is Indian, a wealthy businessman traveling to the United States, frequently mistaken for a servant because of his accent and his skin color.

Stereotypes abound, and the two fight back.

I enjoyed the love story--I don't think that's a spoiler given that I saw it coming in the first couple of chapters--but I also enjoyed all Levy's characters in this book that challenges readers to move beyond same-ness as a reason for friendship and to look beyond the surface, to the essence of being human.

And with all the Levy books I have read, there is a happy ending. I do love happy endings.


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