Pleasant Cruise With Some Choppy Waters
As usual, Andrew Grey comes up with a completely different scenario and two compelling characters to grab you at the start and keep you going so that you don't go back to any of the other books you are currently reading.
In this one he brings together two men in their mid twenties, Arty and Jamie, both with daddy issues that tend to overwhelm their lives--you can get all you want as a preview of what these issues are by reading the blurb.
What I particularly liked about this story is that even though neither Arty nor Jamie are quite sure when they meet that the other guy is gay, author Grey slips them into situations where the obvious becomes apparent on a scale of six to ten, and then it's over-the-top.
Their relationship is dogged by doubts about their fathers, but from completely different perspectives. Arty just wants his hobbled dad to show him some love, or even like, when Arty leaves a good paying career as a model and actor in New York City to rescue his father's fishing business. Jamie just keeps building more distance between him and his father as his dad comes down harder and harder on him to come back home and work the farm.
How the two manage to get their romance kindled and heated up is complicated, of course, but you know this is an Andrew Grey book so you expect a HEA. You might be surprised, however, how this one comes about and that puts this into category. Ahoy!