Space Varmint,
The challenge of good HF receiver design is to maintain the snesitivity and selectivity you want in the mass of other (often much stronger) signals coming in the antenna.
Generally the most important thing is linearity, it's bad enough that there is a mess of other signals there, you don't want to mix them together to create something on top of your signal. So you will often see no LNA, a mixer running at obscene levels of LO power (100mW and up), followed by significant filtering. Often there is an absolute mmiminim of amplification before there has been significant filtering.
LO spurii are a no-no, they simply create spurious responses.
LO phase noise can limit your sensitivity in the presence of large interferers due to reciprocal mixing.
Don't make the mistake of going for sensitivity, below about 20MHz it is unlikely that you will be receiver noise limited and you are better off with linearity. So LNAs are not much use except at the higher end of the band and in quiet rural environments.
PLL design is a challenge, particularly if you want smooth (real time) tuning and frequency resolution suitable for SSB. One reasonably low cost way is to go for modest resolution in the first LO (say 1kHz), and instead of using a fixed second LO, provide +/- 500Hz tuning here. It does mean that the wanted signal moves around a bit in the first IF filter.
Providing the resolution in the second LO can be achieved using a second PLL and division, a second PLL using a n/n+1 divider, a DDS etc...
If you are serious check out Ulrich Rhode's books, there is one on Communication Receiver design I'm pretty sure. There is also a book called "SSB Design Handbook" or something similar.
Peter