For me, this is one of those 'there's a five star story in here' books. I LOVED the writing from the very first page. It flowed well, you could empathize with the characters, there were funny moments. I was truly immersed in the story and was getting warm, fuzzy feelings I was so happy. There were some beautiful moments that stood out - loved Cole's interactions with his fur babies, Zander's heart to heart with Cole gave me butterflies. Savannah's confession at the therapist made me teary...so there is a lot of good in this book, and with a few tweaks, I could have easily given this book five stars.
Early on, however, a few things started to frustrate me.
There is a black man on the cover - I was like interracial romance - yassss. Now, I am all for not making race a huge issue in an interracial romance, and it's nice that some people want to be 'colorblind,' but I felt like I was reading about two specters, instead of two hot, full blooded, virile men. If you're going to go to the lengths of putting a black man on the cover, then you should at least tell us which one of the characters he is! Seriously, it took me almost 40% of the book to figure out Zander was black (there, I told you. You're welcome). There was no real description of either character. I learned more of what they looked like in the EPILOGUE than I did in the entire book. All I knew was that Zander was 6'4 and muscled and Cole was about 5'8 and lean. I read early on that someone had blue eyes, but I forgot who it was, and I could have sworn Zander was described as pale a few times so I was like wait, is neither of them black? Cause that man on the cover is a tall glass of dark chocolate goodness! It was frustrating and distracting, and made something that shouldn't have been a huge deal, all I could think about. We got some sparsely placed comments about dark skin way late in the story, and short curls. Anyone can have short, curly hair. Descriptions enable readers to 'see' the characters, and interracial romances are an opportunity for RICH descriptions and experiences, especially in bed. There was nothing about Zander that said he was black, no description, no cultural experiences, no challenges, just nothing. He was just a cardboard cutout and both he and Cole were so interchangeable that it took me literally half the book to stop mixing them up. I kid you not. This was a missed opportunity! I truly get not wanting to inundate a book with race, but why make a character black if you're not going to address it at all, not even in his description?? Had to create a new shelf just for this book.
Zander's daughter Savannah - I truly loved that Zander was trying with her but, as a character, I really didn't love her. I really don't like rude children. Yes, yes, I know let them explore, be true to their personalities etc etc. Plus she had a lot of emotional issues. I get all that. But there are cute, sassy kids in books that I love. The rolling the eyes, and speaking to adults the way she did didn't work for me. There was also a lost opportunity with her since, outside of the initial exchanges, she had zero one on one interaction with Cole. That would have gone a long way to enhance the family dynamic. They epilogue was really nice, but again, that was at the end. Also, Cole continuously advising Zander that all kids act like his brat was just ugh. No, they do not.
I did love the characters, and loved their journey back to each other. Enjoyed the story. Oh! I felt so bad for Cole's bf! I don't blame Cole but yeah, so sad.
I would give this author another go.