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270 pages, Kindle Edition
First published December 3, 2015
"[Y]ou made me feel something no one ever has."
"And what is that, cariño?"
"Like I belong to you ... Like you wouldn't just let me go."





* of being miles away from his home and his family, and in the first place to be separated from his twin sister, who knows him better than anyone else, and who understands his being different, even if Renaldo himself can’t find a reasonable explanation for his lack of interest in women.
* of spending many weeks out in the prairie, in a company of a total stranger, probably an old horse master.

Where on earth do you think the term “Boston Wife” came from? Or “Oxford Rub”? Bunkhouses were often called “ram pastures,” and the term for two fellas owning up to wanting to get off with each other for a while—typically in a romantic relationship—was called “mutual solace.”Renaldo Valle is apprenticed to a horse "whisperer" Hank Burnett, a black former slave who spent his childhood with the Kiowa and Apache tribes. Hank is gay ("When I was a young man, I learned some truths about myself, and I was fortunate to live with people who accepted that about me, even if most other people wouldn’t.”) while Renaldo is figuring out where his interests lie. In their months-long quest for wild mustangs, Renaldo falls in love:
He wanted Hank to want him, wanted Hank to smile and take Renaldo in his arms, wanted to feel the vibrations of Hank’s body against his own as they laughed together, the solid warmth of Hank’s back against Renaldo’s chest as he held Hank close, both of them standing on a porch at night surveying the land they shared, wanted to experience it all every day and every night until he couldn’t remember what his life had been like without Hank at his side. He wanted it so much his body ached for it.I loved this story of two men who want to live honorably together and I highly recommend it!
