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Acceptance

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Andrew, a twenty-six-year-old literature graduate has been through more drama than many his age. From suffering obesity to arthritis, and then anorexia after drastic attempts to lose body fat, Andrew grows more conscious of his body. He shields himself from the rest of the world in a reserved cabin tucked away in a small town where he dwells in solitude and self-pity. But things can't stay the same forever and Andrew's carefully planned out walls fall around him with the arrival of his Uncle's fiancee's son Ethan.

But Ethan will more than disrupt Andrew's 'perfect' life. He'll also teach him the sole act of acceptance.

181 pages, ebook

First published July 11, 2015

14 people want to read

About the author

Saint Caliendo

26 books71 followers
Multi-featured LGBT+ serial fiction writer.

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5 stars
17 (53%)
4 stars
11 (34%)
3 stars
1 (3%)
2 stars
1 (3%)
1 star
2 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Cathy.
2 reviews1 follower
October 23, 2019
This book has got to be one of my favorite that I found on Tapas. I love how instead of just being the cliché romance we've all already red about, we get more into the characters and what brings them together, no matter how unusual the pairing might seem.
Profile Image for Kali Combs.
24 reviews
April 23, 2020
I've read this twice and I love it, I'm not gay but I definitely love this story and it is a great read!!
Profile Image for Jay.
93 reviews
June 23, 2021
Loved this book and thought it was one of the best stories I'd ever read on wattpad.
Profile Image for Remi.
15 reviews
January 26, 2022
I wish i could rate this higher, as the idea behind the book is quite intriguing. But i’m not going to, because it’s lacking in every single way.

The author has no understanding of anorexia nervosa, on a level that actually makes me angry. The empathy isn’t there, and it feels like the author just read one wiki article and called it a day. There was lots of focus on arthritis, but again, no real empathy. Wheelchair mentioned and forgotten. Beside that, it was childish, the character drama mainly built on lack of communication, but not because the characters didn’t talk, no, it was just lack of communication for the sake of creating drama. And there was so many weird plot points that made no sense.

Anyway, if you have no physical disability, no eating disorders or other mental health issues, and have no history with abuse in relationships, i guess you could give it a shot. I personally would no recommend it to anyone though

I had this at two stars because truthfully i believe two stars often reflects negative reviews better, but i just looked through my read books and got angry at how high rated this shit was
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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