College freshman Elizabeth Foster is beginning to come to terms with her attraction to disabled men but she fears others might judge her harshly if they knew. And that's exactly what happens. When her mother learns the truth, she does everything in her power to stop Elizabeth from finding the only kind of man she could love. Now Elizabeth must learn to trust herself and reject her parents' vision for her future. *** Bonus Stewart returns home to face his past and make up for his mistakes, but he soon discovers that everyone wants something from him. (This is the sequel to the novel, (W)hole, but it also stands on its own.)
After years of combing through the dusty back shelves of libraries looking for her elusive, imperfect hero, she started writing her own.
Ruth’s romantic tales are full of wounded heroes: men physically challenged by life, but not defeated. These men overcome the difficulties of amputation, paralysis, or cerebral palsy to find acceptance, happiness, and heroines who love them exactly as they are.
The book (W)hole was an amazing work that was not only a great read but also opened a dialog into the devotee community and humanized what had been represented only as a perversion in all other mainstream venues; how wonderful it is that this only continued in the follow up Breath(e)!
We pick off where we left off into the most dramatic part of any story; what happens after the happy ending. It's a bit of a spoiler to say the best part was reading Elizabeth date while being open about her disability fetish but I'll risk not warning you as this is why you really need to read this. I've never read fiction as honest and paradigm shifting into a real community as this series.