Sota and Masa, next door neighbors, classmates, best friends. Born hours apart they have gone through everything together but the biggest change of all is coming. At 18 you transition and on the hour of your birth, you grow a tail or horns. Classes change, friends change, mates start to search for one another. Sota and Mesa planned to stay together when each grows a tail but fate intervened. For the first time ever they will be separated if only in class. Neither plans to allow the separation in school to come between their closeness. However, the girls have their sites set on Mesa and a violent bully wants to claim Sota as his own. Is their best friend status at risk, will they drift apart or become even more important to one another?
This is an amazing coming of age story. There are authors that you know you can depend on to fill certain reading desires you may have. You know who to go to if you want a strong heroine or an action-packed story, sexy times or teenage angst. When you pick up a book by Lyn Forester you know that you are going to be transported into another world. Her world building skills are exceptional. The layering, the attention to detail, the subtle nuances she adds change the everyday world we live in into an original creation all her own. But what I have also come to realize is that she is extraordinary at portraying M/M relationships. I first fell in love with her men of Port Lapton, Malachi and Aiden. In House of Glass Declan and Felix are so good together I have concerns for the female of the RH. Now in You to Me, I have found a new young couple to love, Masa and Sota. Masa is the ideal. He's loving, protective, accepting, indulging. Sota is an adorable, sarcastic goof unaware of how cute he is. The two together are a delight. Best friends that know each other, as well as they, know themselves, hidden feelings, new love, lasting love, forever love. Simply perfect. The boy's relationship is a nice balance of sweet and sexy. There's a lot of personal inner thoughts and conversation between the boys and the sexy times are highly enjoyable. Had the book only had these two characters I would have loved it but even the side characters in this book are perfect. The lovely parents; the awkward, unfiltered un-transitioned classmate; the not-so-bad mean girl, the nasty bully, the counselor all fill their role thoroughly.
This book has one other special message that should be mentioned. This is a world where gender and sex are not static, where they don't seem to be slotted into a particular role, and they are not judged. Even the worry over tails and horns seems to be normal teenage angst and not attached to any preconceived stigmas. People are people, love is love. I can't tell you how refreshing that is! On a more superficial note, the new cover is way more eye-catching than the original cover. This book is a true gem.