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286 pages, Kindle Edition
First published April 8, 2014
[Chenco] wasn’t just leaving the valley, he was leaving with his brother. And brother-in-law.
And a card shark, a casino mogul and a gangster.
And his boyfriend and his madmen fresh from the attic.
This was no game, no kinky giggle. This was more reverent than a church service, more personal than any priest-led confession. This was closer to the bone than putting on a dress and wig and makeup and releasing his inner queen.
"It was about, for an hour or two, playing God."
"Every surrender was another chance to be free."
"Tough love, baby. It's the most painful, wonderful kind there is."
Chenco's character and the discussion about cross-dressing. His manifestation is beautiful, a creation greater than himself
Bold choice of kinks: some better displayed than others, but the pain play was GORGEOUS
Crabtree
Untreated mental illness: I'm all for support from family and friends, but there comes a time when medical intervention is imperative and to not do so is selfish and egoistic. As much as we hate it, love CAN NOT heal all.
Too many kinks: some left marginalized and more a flirt than discussion
Timid, vague portrayal of WS (watersports) which is outlined in the briefest terms possible as if too taboo to explore and from the blurb I'd hoped would be more substantial. Ditto on pet play, but to a lesser extent.
Airtime for Chenco and Steve. This series has a fantastic cast of characters which enrich and divert. Unfortunately, I felt like Chenco and Steve often played second fiddle to their supporting cast. Chenco as the primary MC was well developed, but I felt that Steve especially got the short-end of the stick.
He had not expected this, to be drawn so into pain, to be fucked by it— not by blows or bonds but by the pain itself, his own pain. To be released.
“Don’t push yourself for me. Not out of fear. Don’t you ever, ever yield to me in fear.”
You are strong and good, my son. God gave you to me perfect. I am so proud of you, and I love you just the way you are.
…as a child you believe them and for Chenco those words were burned into his soul, but not with the love they should represent, but the hypocrisy and worthlessness that they represented… the pain and rejection of the false utterings of a mother whose love should be unconditional.
Caramela is the alter ego, that protects and gives Chenco the strength to deal with the pain of rejection. Caramela is everything that Chenco has ever wanted to be, confident, feisty, strong, but above all in control. But when the wig comes off and that persona leaves him, Chenco is adrift without an anchor. With the death of his father, a complete and utter bastard… who also happened to be Mitch’s father his life starts to fall apart and that is when Steve finds him.
Steve may not put on a wig and lots of glitter, but he too has his own persona… that of big bad Dom! He comes across as strong and in control, which he is… but it also masks his own loneliness and isolation, there is a blanket of sadness and misery that surrounds Steve… haunted by a past and one man in particular. But Chenco’s youth and spark and Caramela’s dynamic personality ignite something within him he had resigned himself to having lost forever.
Called Monk for his abstinence from sex and relationships, for Steve BDSM is not about the sex, it’s about the control and the power and the ultimate gift of trust and submission, but with Chenco, despite trying to nurture the natural submissive into the lifestyle with that ethos in place, his body yearns for something it hadn’t for over five years… and not just the sex his body seemed to be doing cartwheels over, it’s the emotional as well as the physical connection he yearns for. Chenco called to all his protection instincts, he just wanted to take care of him. Chenco is curious about the lifestyle, as a natural submissive he longs to give up control and trust that Steve could see exactly what he needed without him having to say a word.
If like me you have read countless BDSM books, you’ve heard it all before, an in depth discussion to the BDSM lifestyle and what that would entail for Chenco as a submissive, especially as Steve’s kink is sadism. But as I listened to Steve, it wasn’t just a “how to” manual on BDSM, it was heartfelt, it was his life, and he spoke about it as something he was passionate about, and I don’t mean that sexually. Heidi managed to make me see BDSM as not just some smut and kink I like to read about. For those people that live it, it’s an intense and emotional experience which doesn’t necessarily have to involve an intimate relationship. Much like the poker, and the pivotal role that it played in Randy and Ethan’s relationship, which Heidi managed to make a fascinating experience… haha, for someone that doesn’t like gambling, that was an achievement in itself! The BDSM in Tough Love was just as compelling and engrossing. It wasn’t just Steve’s telling, but also Chenco’s reaction to Steve’s gentle and tender encouragement, analysing his own reactions and feelings, unfamiliar, yet his body and soul craved for all of Steve’s praise, attention and care. Discovering his masochistic streak was a perfect pairing for his Dom’s sadistic streak.
Tough Love, for me had a completely different feel to it than the previous two books. Both Special Delivery and Double Blind were sexually intense, the pages burned up with it. In Tough Love, even though the kink is more prevalent and just as intense, it’s subtle somehow with a lot of it off page, personally this book was more about two lost souls, who more than need each other to survive, each supporting each others weaknesses and drawing from each others strengths, healing their wounds with the kink being a mutual purging of the pain they both endure.
The fabulousness of this book, for me of course was the inclusion of the characters from book 1 and book 2… yes my Randy, I just love him! His character just seems to animate every page he makes an appearance, his snark, humor, just being a pain in the arse… but most of all his incredibly intuitiveness. Chenco being related to Mitch, makes them family, and Mitch’s family, this misfit bunch that they are, are a big part of his life making them Chenco’s family. Sam and Chenco being the same age hit it off, and there is so much testosterone flying around, mainly in the guise of Crabtree.Unassuming yet without a doubt an underlying threat that commands attention, he comes to the rescue again, quietly assured, sussing out the needs of the people that have also become his family.
I have loved this series, the characters and their journeys, and in all honesty, I can’t recommend it enough. As always, Heidi just wowed me with her writing, and just confirms the reason why she is without a doubt one of my favourite authors.
Every surrender was another chance to be free.
recently and kinky sex.