Tropes: small town, neighbors, instalove, Christmas romance
Feels: 3/5
Steam*: 1.5/5
Kinks: n/a
Angst: low
HEA: yes
Pairing: MM
Triggers/potential icks/content warnings: PTSD/burnout from being a doctor/firefighter, fire and medical emergencies
3.5 Stars
Rob is 36 and he's a doctor. He has been dedicated to his work at the expense of his personal life for years and years, and he is burned out. He worked in the ER at a very busy hospital. He was on the brink of quitting medicine, when a friend convinced him to try a different pace, and be a part-time doctor in a small town that had an opening. Rob decides to give it a year or two and at the end of November he moves. His first day there, his piece is disturbed by a noisy Harley-Davidson, his neighbor coming home. Rob confronts his neighbor about the noise and he's instantly attracted to him.
Soren is 28 and he is a fire captain. He usually doesn't do relationships because he's in a small town and there aren't a lot of single gay men. He goes out of town from time to time to hook up. The small town has a bit of a reputation for newcomers coming to town around Christmas and quickly falling in love with someone in town. Soren wouldn't mind being the Christmas Cupid's next victim. He's attracted to Rob too and they start spending time together and quickly form an attachment. They are saying I love yous within a month and basically cohabitating.
This was a decent book. The characters were mature emotionally and they communicated. They seemed like nice people and they fit each other. The side character Hamish was the best thing about the book though, he shipped them together hard and he always wanted to hear the gossip about their developing relationship. He added some nice comic relief and stole the scenes he appeared in. Chuck and Katie were also nice side characters, that added some positive vibes. I appreciated the representation in seeing Katie, a character with down syndrome, being such a capable and respected take charge kind of person! That was really representation done well.
A couple things I didn't like a book about the book... the romance was a little awkward. I didn't like the premise, that there were so few queer single folks, that they didn't have much of a choice but to fall for each other. It kind of took away the specialness when there wasn't much of a choice. When they were talking and getting to know each other, I found some of their conversation awkward, a bit dispassionate, a bit cheesy and do gooder ish. The dancing of the waltz at the fire hall was a little over the top for me, I would have just enjoyed the bringing the pizza moment without that. In a weird way, their emotions for each other were a little too tepid, too slow (I didn't feel the chemistry from the start) while at the same time being too insta-love for me (it was so fast for them to be in love and living together within a month).
Still enjoyable though, very much a Christmassy read.
Some notable moments:
"Then a very high-pitched keening sounded nearby, which I realized was Hamish. I broke the kiss and glanced over at him, slightly concerned for his well-being, Soren keeping me close with his hand now burning into my neck. Hamish had his hands to his face, doing a little skippity dance. “Now that is BDE.” But then Clay came over and dragged him away. “I want to watch,” he tried. “See ya, guys,” Clay said with a wave as he basically threw Hamish into the cab of his truck."
"Chuck looked at me and shook his head with a long sigh. “I’m happy for you, bro. I know you’ve been wanting someone of your own for a while now. I hope it works out. I really do. I mean, he brought you a pizza. A whole-ass pizza.” Then he shrugged. “If you decide he’s not as perfect as you thought, put a good word in for me.” I shoved him so hard he almost fell off his chair."
"Hamish looked at the supplies he shoved into my arms. “I thought I could guess what you were going to make, but the food-safe sealant is throwing me off. Any clues?” “No. You’ll need to be as horrified as everyone else when they open it.” “I think you mean surprised.” “No. I didn’t.”"
*FYI about steam: I rate steam based on a combination of quality & quantity. I note kink separate from steam because I don't want to underrate steamy reads that don't have much kink.
**Note about spoilers: I like to comment on the plot of a book in reviews, so I almost always mark my reviews as containing spoilers. But I try to avoid spoiling the big dramatic moments! As a reader, I personally like to know what I'm getting into before I read a book so I know more about the content and if it's to my taste/mood, so I try to give that information in my reviews for myself when I'm considering rereading and also for other readers.