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215 pages, Kindle Edition
First published February 8, 2018
Uncomfortable. She is pained whether sitting or lying, and standing is no better. But she rests and has much chocolate and vodka and what’s the word? Romance novels that are…ah! Trashy. — Mikhail "Misha" Reznikov (about Kisa)
June 2020 reread: I'm in a rereading mood I need comfort. Zoloto as the name for a beloved pet is still one of the better names I've ever read. There is so much meaning behind it, and the line Misha uses to explain it causes echos through Holding the Edge which I didn't pick up the first time. Bailey and Kisa are still legends it's so nice to see such strong female characters in mlm fiction. Even Keira doesn't do that a lot. I'm happy to I chose to reread this. It hasn't contaminated my memories of it at all, always a risk.
“Misha. This is what friends call me.”
“I’m not your friend.” Dev was simply stating a fact.
Mikhail—Misha—smiled softly. “No. You are my…little rebellion.” He pressed their lips together gently. “Thank you for that.”
“I…you’re welcome? We shouldn’t…we can’t.” But I don’t ever want to stop.
Mikhail’s expression clouded. “No. We can’t.” He leaned their foreheads together. “But it felt good, yes?” — Mikhail "Misha" Reznikov & Dev Avira
Gosh I loved this book so much. It's been so long since I've fallen as fast, as hard as I did for Mikhail "Misha" Reznikov (last time was probably Snow in Shatter). I have a thing for fictional Russians. Seriously attractive, tragic backstories, repressed passion and quirky humour. This is Misha. I cooed hard, he's gorgeous inside and out. Misha is not initially the protagonist that is Dev Avira. Dev is a likeable narrator and character. He has a helluva backstory. Everything switches in the second half. Misha is the narrator. It is pleasant to read, seeing the other side.
A warning. There are some moments of homophobia and forced sexual repression. It does not dwell on it unduly but it is a core to the plot. Especially in the second half of the book.
Misha and Dev are well supported by a largely female cast. Their skating partners Kisa and Bailey and in the first book Louise, Dev and Bailey's manager. Kisa and Bailey are brilliant, both of them want the best for their men. Kisa is so strong and not at all what I expected. Bailey is the best bestie a person could ask for, take no shit, put him first even when he doesn't and he is so funny. Both of them are just fantastic. I love them.
I liked the writing style. Especially in the first half of the book. Misha's linguistic patterns feel right for a person who spent time in America and on a touring circuit. He understands some slang. The Russian used adds to the story. Especially once Dev is given his kink. Zoloto made me smile, the smile itself is adorable be the reasoning made me weak. The effort in the writing shows in the name usage by Dev. His difficulty in separating Mikhail and Misha and how the name shows this. It's a small thing really but details matter.
I feel the need to point out that The Winning Edge was initially published as two novellas, Cold War and Holding the Edge. Kiera Andrews does state this in the blurb but publishing them together is a bit of risk to my eyes. There is so much risk that the second novella Holding the Edge could ruin the first. That wasn't the case here. I loved both of them. Yes, Cold War was slightly better but when reading in succession they are wonderful. The female characters shine in Holding the Edge and it does conclude Misha and Dev's story so well. Reading from Misha's perspective was a joy, seeing Dev from his perspective, seeing his reasoning for their decision.
For the record, you guys are all, like, totally blind. And once you get over the shock, they’re pretty freaking adorable. So get over it already. — Bailey Robinson
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