Book 2 of the Free Fall duet picks up where book 1 left off, and if you intend to read the duet and haven’t yet read book 1, this will be a spoilery review.
I enjoyed the sequel a lot, in no small part due to the continued immersion in this world of rock climbing in Yosemite and the authentic details infused throughout the read. Sejin and Dan’s continuing story was fascinating and riveting. In this book, I also appreciated the attention to recovery from a near deadly climbing accident; there were no cut corners or soft-soaping the agony as well as the near-deathly boredom of having to lay down for weeks without putting ANY weight on a leg, if Dan wanted to heal properly and have any shot of climbing again.
Which put them in the rather funny, poignant, and aggravating situation of the lovely, kind Sejin becoming the sole caretaker for the prickly, confounding man he fell in love with just weeks ago, and Dan having to completely rely on and trust Sejin for...well, EVERYTHING...when loss of autonomy and independence is the worst thing he could imagine. Yeah, it was a situation that could have devolved badly! But...it didn’t. These two also have respect for each other that underlies that fragile new love, and while they did drive each other round the bend a time or two, it was never a total disaster, and the situation proves rather rapidly and solidly that these two really do want to be together and will put in the work to have Them.
Quite the unique situation. Dan’s laid up and going out of his mind. Sejin is working three jobs now, including caring for Dan (that one’s unpaid of course, now neither has any savings, thanks to Dan’s crushing hospital bills), and he’s exhausted and wrung out.
Lucky for them, their found family’s got their back, and there is so much warmth and comfort in seeing their small town community as well as the rock climbing community rally to help. It’s amazing, because Dan’s been such a loner, not making friends, not publicizing or monetizing his climbing to the point that most think he’s an arrogant dick who might have deserved to fall. But people still rally, and a new ally comes into their lives via one of Dan’s only (count them, 3) friends and helps build a total new source of income for Dan and his bills via social media in a realistic and interesting way. Platform builders, take note (I say, knowing zippo about building a platform, but...this made sense).
That also brought in a note of kind of ick with Dan kind of drooling over that character for a hot minute, but, it also made sense with the way his brain works? I could have done without it, but, it was over fast and not a Thing later, soooo. Yeah.
ADDING this note...one quite powerful element of the recovery and development of the ongoing relationship is Dan's absolute certainty/determination that he WILL re-attempt the solo climb that nearly killed him in book 1. Solo climbing = climbing with no ropes/harness/safety net of any kind, so, if you fall? You are 99.9 of the time going to die in a giant splat. The way he and Sejin come to terms with Dan's drive and committment to this potentially deadly goal and how Sejin makes peace with it and Dan approaches it in a way that is respectful to Sejin and what he's come to mean in Dan's life was truly mesmerizing. Not everyone will agree with it, but, it worked for me and I felt they both won in the way they handled the situation. It was thorny AF and gut-wrenching. Made me question a lot about what it means to truly love and support someone for who they are, and to live for yourself but then choose to adjust your outlook to account for love and feelings for someone who has become important to you.
One thing surprised me...in this book Dan reveals to Sejin that he’s autistic, and Sejin was...surprised. It was a whole Moment, a Thing, that helped Sejin understand Dan better, but... I’m like...uh...didn’t we all already know that? From Dan’s narrative voice and the way his mind works, it seemed obvious in book 1, and I didn’t realize no one had actually talked about it. I don’t know how good the representation is, lay person here, but, it felt authentic to me. Something about the reaction to the revelation here was off to me, because Sejin seemed to see it as an excuse for some of Dan’s shall we say less than stellar behavior, but...*shrugs*. It was all just Dan being Dan. He’s one of the few characters who’ll tell you he’s a dick, but it doesn’t feel like an excuse just to be a dick, because the intensity of his personality and his passion for climbing ARE him, and that means he has little time for anything else but you know that already, so, he really is a take-him-as-he-is or leave him character. Sejin takes him and loves him and doesn’t try to change him. And Sejin receives Dan’s extreme and true appreciation of Sejin in return.
Secondary characters are still fabulous, layered, authentic, and add so much to the read with subplots and tension that support the main story and also add intrigue and questions I’d love to get answers to, should there wind up being other books in this world. The found family and bio family threads are all strong and well developed, with conflicts and satisfying resolutions.
Sejin’s hair situation made me teary. Of all things! Ha. And one SC’s health situation was also an emotional thread.
Realistic characters, challenging situations, working through trauma and tough times...the entire book held my interest, even when I didn’t necessarily like a character’s choice.
Meeting Sejin’s dad and how his on-page time played out was a lot of fun, I loved that solution for other people, even if it was a bit too easy?! Whatevs. Good choice.
Overall, this is a series I will gladly re-read, with unique and authentic characters and an unusual setting and theme. Truly enjoyable. Maddening at times, but rewarding to survive and triumph with the characters.
HEA (hard-won and SO triumphant!), injured rock-climber and barrista/dance teacher, autism rep, MC of color, found family, many challenges both physical and financial, and an unforgettable small-community sensibility. Safe for me; thank god all the references to ALL the previous lovers for both MCs finally died down in this book. One note of OW drama, but...it weird and unnecessary, but easy for me to forget about as the story progressed. Highly recommended duet.
My thanks to Gay Romance Reviews for the ARC; this is my free and impartial opinion.