After thoroughly enjoying Bad Boyfriend (which is the second novel in K.A. Mitchell’s Bad in Baltimore series,) I was finally able to find an open schedule slot to nab the most recent and sixth installment, Bad Habit. Boy was I reminded what a treat I’ve been missing. It’s chock full of secondary characters, from Mitchell’s previous books, who are so enticing I’ll need to go back and catch up. Luckily, Bad Habit reads well as a standalone.
I love how Mitchell consistently creates fully developed characters. Scott and Liam are men who loved each other as teens in the foster care system, again as young adults, and now, by chance, meet in their late-twenties.
Readers quickly learn Liam, a paramedic, left Scott, a mechanic, without explanation. Scott’s life has gone downhill ever since. “Scott had spent six years killing and burying every stupid soft thing Liam had dragged out. Hope and love and belonging,” Mitchell informs us. What readers don’t know is how, and if the men can, or should get back together.
It’s hard to create a character readers love to hate. And, after thousands of gay romances, it was amazing to encounter a unique personality.
But Scott, who hits first and thinks later, literally in Liam’s case, is the guy we’ve always avoided. How could he possibly attract us?
Mitchell paints Scott with such dignity and honor that Liam, who is smarter, more polished and more “stable,” finds himself playing catch-up. Even though he lost a leg in the Army, Liam knows he’s had way more opportunities than his buddy. Yet Liam, recognizes that he dreads their reunion, as much as he longs for it, and thinks, “It had nothing to do with PTSD or jeeps… (Liam would) chase something, like getting out of foster care and back with his mom, becoming a doctor, or being able to drive again, but the closer he got to having it, the less he seemed to want it.”
Except for music and Scott. Can Liam stop running (tough with a prosthesis) long enough to take responsibility for his own needs – much less Scott’s? Will he stop lying to himself and pursue his passion with the band where he sings?
In a few succinct sentences and with many playfully, aggressive feints, Mitchell presents two men on edge, men who can only love by finding an equal with whom to tussle. They each must be with someone strong enough, sufficiently trustworthy, to share his well-earned rage.
Here’s another delightful element. Readers often know what happens before we know why it did, like why Scott strikes Liam, how Liam lost his leg, etc. It’s an exciting format which parallels their personalities, as if life was always one step ahead of them.
And yeah, I’ve often felt that way. Thus, I identified with men I wasn’t even sure I’d like! Wow! Good writing!
Here’s another example of brilliance. After their initial confrontation, Scott apologizes because he hadn’t known about Liam’s prosthesis when he hit him. Liam’s retort? “’So you’re only sorry about hitting me because I’m down a leg?’” Isn’t “down a leg” a million times better than other phrases. Get used to it. Mitchell’s dialogue is pitch-perfect.
In other words, Bad Habit will become my good habit. I’ve now downloaded all the other novels in this series on my to-be-read list. What fun!