Stud: A boss, knob, or nail head...or, you know, the hot guy who’s way too young to keep asking me out with that adorably earnest smile …
It’s been three years since West walked into my bar and asked me out for the first time. I was relieved he stopped asking after the first few “no”s and a way-too-good-to-be-real kiss. He’s fifteen years younger than I am; it can only lead to trouble.
Of course, now he’s running through people off dating apps like it’s his job and wearing these lace panties that look really unfair on someone as furry and muscular as he is, and, um...what was I talking about?
I probably shouldn’t sabotage his dates, but I’m only human. I might not be ready to admit that I want him, but I’m definitely not ready to let anyone else have him either.
He’s too perfect, too hot, and I am in way too much trouble…
*** Stud is a friends-to-lovers, construction-worker-in-panties, omg-so-much-swoon story that happens to be the fifth book in the Four Bears Construction Series. Every book in this series CAN be read as a stand alone, but they’re a lot more fun together!
K.M.Neuhold has long since been a romance junkie. When she’s not writing she’s reading or spending time snuggling with her husky or her husband. She fell in love with M/M romance last year and hasn’t been able to turn back. There’s nothing she loves more than love in all its forms.
The beginning was so promising that I thought this would be my favourite in the series. Sadly, it went downhill for me pretty quickly.
I really liked West. He's sweet, thoughtful and, although younger, he's definitely the mature one and he knows what he wants.
Sawyer is anything but. I liked him in previous books, but I didn't like him in this one. There was a sense of imbalance between them, and I'm not talking about the age difference.
On a positive note, I did enjoy seeing the characters from previous books. Even though I still find them very ridiculous at times.
I'm going to parrot what several reviewers have already stated: Sawyer did not deserve West.
West did everything for Sawyer (renovated his house, shoveled his driveway, brought him coffee/food, was at Sawyer's beck and call basically), and what did Sawyer do in return? Push West away, then sabotage all of West's dates (which I found mildly amusing but also creepy and mean-spirited).
Sawyer was obsessed with the age difference, going on and on about how West was just a baby, but West was far more mature and selfless than Sawyer, who only thought of himself (not: Am I hurting West by constantly rejecting him? but: I'll be so crushed if West leaves me for someone his age.)
Because the dynamic of the relationship annoyed me so much, I barely paid attention to the sexy bits (which are typically a highlight for me in a K.M. Neuhold story).
The "ducklings" were cute, and Gus's story was sweet, although for the life of me I don't understand why Gus, who employed Sawyer for several years and was close enough to Sawyer to leave Sawyer his bar and house,
IMO, this is a HUGE plot hole. Sawyer reading the love letters sent to Gus (mysteriously left in a desk drawer, like Gus wouldn't have considered them a priced possession) and finally realizing that maybe he should give the relationship with West a go felt more like a plot orchestration than a love story.
So, yeah, this wasn't my favorite book in the series, but I still have hope (because how cute is Porter, seriously?).
Sadly, I felt very disappointed with this one. At this point, I've struggled with three in a row from this author. It's time to maybe say that she's not for me anymore. At the very least, I think I'll take a break because something isn't working at the moment. 😭
😡 🦀 Crabby Patty spoiler rant:
I don’t want to be 💯 negative. There were some sweet parts that I liked. Unfortunately they weren’t enough to get me through the parts that bothered me. The series has been overall good and entertaining. Some I enjoyed way more than others. And I can see myself rereading a few of them. Especially book four I believe. But I think this might be the end of the road and where I end with them.
Mixed feelings for this one but ultimately a happy ending
3.5*
I wasnt sure where my rating was going to fall for this one because for almost two thirds of it, I really didn't like Sawyer.
West is an absolute sweetheart, he's the perfect book boyfriend, kind, thoughtful and attentive, with ultimate patience.
Sawyer, on the other hand, is a 40-year-old manchild for most of the book.
And yes, I get it, he'd been hurt, he had legitimate issues and his fears weren't unfounded.
But! Just one conversation with West about what happened and why he had such a hang up about his age would have worked miracles.
I get that it would have removed a lot of the tension, but lack of communication, especially between two men who are best friends already, drives me nuts and I find no pleasure in it dragging out.
Especially for three years like here! West deserves a medal for waiting so long for Sawyer to get his head out of the proverbial.
But, from the 65% ish mark, when he'd stopped being a d**k and sabotaging West's dates, his attitude began to change and I got less annoyed by him.
The final quarter, and the Epilogue, are beautifully swoon, if only they could have got there a bit sooner!
The wildlife additions, however, were utterly fabulous and I adored them from the start 🐣
It's not you, it's me..? I liked the book in general and all of the guys in the series, but I think I might have read it at the wrong time. I had just finished a book with all the same story elements but way better. So, it didn't have a fair shot with me. I am looking forward to the next one, however.
I enjoyed this, Sawyer’s antics were childish and aggravating but I laughed a few times and I liked how West reacted when he found out the truth. The geese and the letters were nice subplots to the story, I was throughly entertained. I’m glad West’s parents had their redemption, love that these books have really no drama or angst Still very excited to keep reading this series.
I've been looking forward to reading this book since it came out. West have been one of my favorite characters throughout the series and I couldn't wait for him to get his happy ending. This would've been such a good read... if West was paired with literally anyone else than Sawyer. Gosh, I dislike Sawyer with passion. Look, I've been reading a lot of books lately with unlikeable characters. But no one, and I mean no one has been more unlikeable than Sawyer. Let's start with the elephant in the room. The sabotaging of West's dates. I get it. It's supposed to be funny. Too bad it's not. I cringed hard the first time. And then just harder and harder the more it went on. I cringed the hardest when West found out. Sawyer got away way too easy with all the shit he pulled. Sawyer got away way too easy with everything. West did everything to him. Sawyer did the bare minimum in return. Seriously, their relationship was the definition of unbalanced. I couldn't stop thinking about Taylor Swift's song tolerate it. It's basically this book but with a happy ending. Read the lyrics and you'll understand.
I was close to DNF this book so many times because of Sawyer. But at the same time I was hoping for his redemption. What we got was too little of a redemption, way too late. After a while all I cared for was the old love letters between Wooley and Sunny. Their love story was something extraordinary. I got that just from the few letters.
There was some cute moments. And I loved seeing the couples from previous books. But overall, nothing could save it.
Four Bears Construction #5, a stand alone in the series, friends to lovers. Three years now, West has been wanting Sawyer, who keeps turning him down, but they are best friends, hang out and enjoy doing things together. Sawyer owns a bar, he's hot, with shiny long dark hair, 40, and insecure about their age difference. West, 25, muscled and sweet, is STUD on the cover, and had been taken in by Uncle Dare. He's an apprentice at Four Bears. Bi, West decides to date and give up on Sawyer, but then, Sawyer secretly sabotages West's dates. Tricky, and a tangled web. Our guys eventually break down and have a quickie, but Sawyer pulls back. He can't risk losing his best friend. Plus, lace panties ?
West helps Sawyer renovate the house he inherited from Gus. They have movies, dinners, and puzzles to work on, and then Sawyer finds hidden letters from Gus to his lover, circa 1958. West's 12 dates get worse, men or women, and he still longs for Sawyer. Sawyer was remorseful, finally.
As things move on with renovations, West is learning more at work, and will take classes, and his heart is Sawyer's. And then... baby ducks !
We watch our guys bonding, finding out more about the date sabotage, and they give in to their passionate desires.
Hot sex and hope. Deep feelings and and hesitancy. This is a sweet story, with the double emotion as they read about Gus and Sunny in the letters, which are wonderful.
Loved the characters, hot lovin' and awesome friendship. ENJOY !
West has wanted Sawyer since they first met way back when in the 1st or 2nd book of the series. West has made that clear to Sawyer who has consistently let him know he wasn't interested. Honestly, the way Sawyer treated West, there were times where I hoped they wouldn't get together or that Sawyer would at least make up for things he did.
Sawyer was hurt once in the past, shortly before he met West, and apparently, it's made him selfish and childish. I didn't love the way he treated West, giving him mixed signals and sabotaging his attempts to date. The "I don't want you but don't want anyone else to have you either" just didn't work for me here. Ths was like a reverse age-gap since West is clearly the more emotionally mature of the two.
I'm sure others will love this, it just didn't work that well for me. There were some fun parts and a few sweet moments between the two, but it was also a lot of West giving, and Sawyer taking, with West just so enamored of him, he didn't seem to care and that became a bit repetitive for me in the end.
This was fine, but a bit disappointing. See, I've generally really enjoyed this series and the summary for this one seeming *right* up my alley, but it didn't quite deliver what I was looking for. Despite the fact that the age difference between West and Sawyer is supposedly a big hurdle for Sawyer, he did not at all come across as the 40-year-old man he supposedly was. He was honestly written in a way that, had the author not told me their ages, I'd have assumed he wasn't that much older than West. I didn't really feel the chemistry between them, the smut was tepid at best, there were SO many other characters I couldn't keep them straight, and the plot randomly used one of my least favorite tropes "letters from historical gays who had to ~struggle~ for their love" which is a very hard sell for me and was utterly random and unnecessary here. Perhaps I wouldn't have felt so bummed if I hadn't been looking forward to this one, both because of hints of their story in earlier books and the blurb, but yeah, probably my least fav in the series. :(
Despite the great writing in this book, I nearly gave up on this story. It was only my innate curiosity about what was going to happen next, and the fact that West deserved his HEA that kept me reading.
Why? Because I think there is a limit to certain things and continuously sabotaging potential partners for someone you continuously reject is just...wrong. Sure, I found the first instance funny(because it was in the spur of the moment) but Sawyer continuing it was wrong and childish. Especially for someone who was using age as the basis of said rejection.
I'll be honest and also say that this marred my entire reading experience and if not for the banter of the four bears, their antics and the introduction of other dynamics within the story, I don't think I would've made it to the end because I didn't feel he was made to see the import of his action.
Nonetheless, given the great track record of books in this series, I will be continuing with my fave contractors and hope the next book will be better for me than this was!
I am still laughing about the outrageous pranks that the Four Bears crew play on each other and how West takes shopping to a whole new hilarious level. This may indeed be the swooniest book in the series. Not just for the intense, blazing hot connection that Sawyer and West harbor, not just for all the amazing ways West shows Sawyer how much he cares, but for the absolutely beautiful and heartwarming romance found within these pages.
I rode an emotional rollercoaster with Sawyer: I laughed for his unfortunate incident, I cringed—and ok laughed too—at his getting to know West’s dates, I hurt for his pain and fear, I wanted to thump him on his stubborn head for keeping West at arm’s length for so long, and I wanted to wrap him in a warm hug and tell him he is exactly where he needs to be. “Anything is possible when you don’t try to stop love from growing where it wants to take root.” I think the seeds for Sawyer and West were planted ages ago. From their friendship grew an incredible and deep love that means anything and everything is possible with these two and I feel blessed that they’re in my heart and life.
I've been waiting for West's story since we met him in Book 2, he was the baby of the FBC and he deserves every good thing. I was intrigued by Sawyer, and the premise sounded great...
But Sawyer just exhausted me. I understood his concerns and initial hang ups, and I'm all for a slow burn, pining etc etc, but you can only ignore what someone repeatedly tells you so many times. Also, West is 26, not 18. He's an adult in every sense of the word.
And honestly, what concerned me more was Sawyer's 'sabotage' of West's dates. It wasn't cute. By any stretch of the imagination. And I grimaced my way through all of it. And West is supposed to be the young and 'immature' one...
This was a best friends to lovers at it's core, and if you can't trust your best friend's word who are you going to trust?
It was still sweet, hot, had me laughing at some bits, and I'll always enjoy getting glimpses at past couples (and future ones!!!). I can't wait to read Apollo's story, and Miller's as well - and hopefully at least a novella with that triad ;9
Stud is the fifth book in the Four Bears Construction series and it is great to be back in this world. While the initial series introduced us to the titular “four bears,” there were some other characters who needed stories and I am really excited that K.M. Neuhold is continuing the series. We have met both West and Sawyer previously, and West works for the construction company. This story also features all the bears, their partners, and side characters from the series. So while you could probably get away with reading this one alone from a plot standpoint, I think it is definitely richer being familiar with the other books and characters.
The story starts us off at Cole and Ren’s wedding where we see the connection between West and Sawyer and the kiss they share. It is clear that West is very interested in Sawyer, but Sawyer has been turning him down and West finally decides to stop asking.
Well, it's my least favorite book in the series. This was not what I expected. West, he was so sweet and he didn't deserve the scrambled feelings Sawyer gave him, almost half the book🤦♀️. He's so cute and considerate, he's the type of man who would do anything for you, also very mature, even more so than Sawyer. So I was annoyed with his attitude. I didn't like the dates that Sawyer sabotaged, they weren't funny or cute, and I didn't feel the love between them as I had imagined, it was just West giving love throughout the book. 🤦♀️ On the plus side, I liked the letters, not the reason they were there, but the story they told.
sigh. If only I had someone who would sabotage my dates out of love and jealousy.
This was a hilariously adorable book. I could NOT stop laughing and truthfully I thought the slight back and forth between west and sawyer would piss me off; but it didn’t. *gasp*
Shocker right?
I think their characters made it a little difficult to get frustrated with the uneven relationship.
Overall. This book was a v sweet and quick romance. Perfect when you just want a light read and preferably nothing too serious to get invested in.
I'm giving this book also 3.8⭐, because I feel like I only really liked the first book in the series and since I'm invested in the couples already, I'm rounding it up to 4⭐, even though for me the last 4 books are not 4⭐ read, they're a solid 3.5-3.8⭐.
I actually really liked this couple and I was invested in their story. I liked Ren and Cole and these two the most so far.
🟨 Age gap of 14 years 🟧 Unrequited love 🟥 Pining 🟪 No hooking up with others even when the mc's aren't actually together 🟦 No angst 🌶️ Good spice
The story is about West, Dare's nephew, who's now 26 and works in construction with Dare's husband Stone. He's been hopelessly in love with Sawyer for the past 3 years and I remember the first time West saw him at the bar, I think that was love at first sight, right off the bat.
This was my West. He's tall, ripped and a total cinnamon roll.
West is totally in love with Sawyer, a 40 year old bar owner. They did kiss at Cole and Ren's wedding, but Sawyer turned West down. He's been hurt a lot and is afraid to let someone get close. He feels the age gap is too big and believes West will change his mind about him in the future.
This was my Sawyer. (I couldn't find a pic without the scissors, but I really like his face.)
🟩 Until about 50-60% of the book I was all in, I really liked the pacing, the anticipation and the development of the story, but when West and Sawyer finally break the ice and start seeing each other, I was kind of confused. That transition didn't do it for me, I think it should have been a bigger deal than it was. They went from being good friends to boyfriends in a heartbeat and I can't remember them really talking about it.
🟩 That promised date that West was asking for for 3 years finally got the green light and then it didn't happen. Like...what? And when it finally did, it wasn't really special. I wanted him to really make it special, for Sawyer.
🟩 Again with the off-page sex/intimacy.
So the series has solid 3.5⭐ books, great characters and really good spice. This is a new author for me and she's writing exactly the kind of intimacy that I like, it's to the point exactly the kind of spice that I like to read about and I really wish she would just write it all down, not skip it. I want to feel the MC's and what they're going through, how they're falling for each other and whatever they experience together on an intimate level, I don't want to imagine what's going in the passing weeks or months.
Even so, I really liked this couple.
Seeing Porter here is kinda funny, because I already read his book, so I'm so glad that I know he's getting that hot love story of his own.😄
Wow, I wasn't expecting to love this one as much as I did. Book 4 had been my favourite of the bunch, but I think this was equal fave. The only thing that I didn't love was the 2 year jump near the start, where we miss a lot of the beginning of their friendship. But I loved both MCs, and I loved the old love letters they find and read. Oh, and the lace panties! I love a man in lace panties 🔥
All of these books follow a very similar journey, and funnily, all have cute pets. The found family is growing bigger and bigger, and it's so sweet.
For starters, I will never find someone sabotaging potential relationships for someone else so that no one else can date them as a 'cute' concept - big fat red flag, and this coming from a 40 year old man claiming the other man is too young and doesn't know what he wants. It was a huge plot of the book and was more annoying than anything. Also the concept of the time jump completely ruins the book. For any of this to be believable, we'd also have to believe that everyone was in stasis for the 2 years, because 1) why would West's friends wait TWO YEARS to have the intervention? 2) In those 2 years, when West and Sawyer were presumably still friends and hanging out, did Sawyer just not like him then? Did year 3 hit then West became suddenly irresistible? Because from this standpoint, it seems that he only became interested in West when West started dating, which, again, 🚩🚩🚩. West is a sweetheart, Sawyer is terrible for him. Authors should maybe normalize MCs with problematic traits actually seeking help and resolving their issues beyond a pep-talk at the 75% mark and epiphanies coming out of nowhere.
Let me preface by saying that I really like this author & she was one of the first authors that I started reading MM in 2017. She can write very cute and funny and she can also write hurt/comfort and trauma, so she has a good range, not to mention that she includes transgender characters which is great!
I have also enjoyed much of this series and this one was fine but it was exactly that "fine." Most of the other books either had a lot more humor or substance...all this one really brought to the table was a muscle-bound construction worker who likes to wear lace panties, murder ducks and mild fluff, otherwise it was kind of boring. If it were that special kind of fluff that seems to melt me into a puddle of goo it would have been better but sadly, it wasn't.
I also think a big part of it is that my tastes have evolved some so it could be the old "it's me, not the book" nugget, so I don't want someone not to read it because I have been weird about contemporary romance for a while now.
While I enjoyed this one, it's my least favourite in the series. Sawyer annoyed be a bit with his childishness and immaturity. I don't know, the sabotage of West's dates really put me off. 🤷♀️
I also got the feeling that West loved Sawyer a whole lot more throughout the whole book.
I liked the 'duckings' and the old love letters. Loved the cameos fom previous couples and I'm looking forward to Miller's book.
4.5 stars Oh, the saga of West and Sawyer. Stud and Peaches.
West is Dare's nephew and has been learning the construction business. He has had a crush on bartender, Sawyer, since her first laid eyes on him. After a few rejections and a toe-curling kiss, they have just maintained a good friendship for the past couple of years. West is fifteen years younger, but sweet, fun, and eager for a relationship (and wishes Sawyer would agree). But West is being pressured by his friends to give up his crush and start exploring other options.
Sawyer's life has undergone plenty of changes in the past few years. He suffered a bad breakup that has left him resistant to relationships. He inherited a bar that took up the majority of his time and caused a lot of stress. And he is about to take on a home renovation. He enjoys his friendship with West and is now starting to realize how important he has become to him. He should be happy that his friend is starting to date, but that does not seem to be the case.
Jealousy and unresolved feelings start to spark, but also confuse the situation. They are friends with excellent chemistry. West has always known what he wants. But Sawyer is guarded and fearful, and neither want to lose their friendship. Sawyer finds himself in that limbo land where he is afraid to give in to him, but does not want anyone else to have him either.
This is a fun, slow burn, steamy, friends-to-lovers, smile-inducing, heartwarming, age-gap romance. West is just the sweetest, hottest, most honest, loyal, and patient man. There is a maturity about him and he knows what makes him happy. Sawyer is a bit more reserved and fearful of rejection, but sometimes despite being older, he is the one acting more immature. But he also has a big heart and a lot to give. Their connection is obvious from the start, they just need some walls to come down and be willing to take a risk.
It brings back the other guys from the series including the newer members, Miller and Apollo. I love how these guys look out for the other, but also enjoy teasing and taunting each other. A smaller underlying thread running through the background of the story, also added depth. And who knew that wildlife could be so cute? I am looking forward to more in this series that always touches my heart while also making me smile and swoon.
Nothing here worked for me. This is a short, simple, totally angst - free story. Sawyer is a dick who used West to rebuild his house FOR FREE and jerked him around. West is desperate for the unavailable older guy. There is no development of both characters. The Stud nickname is offensive, it never seemed affectionate or whatever. This is exactly how Sawyer treated West - like a young, strong horse to use. Ugh.
Neuhold has been a go to author for me for a long time and I feel like I either love it or it just doesn't work for me, and sadly, this one just didn't work for me. I've waited for West and Sawyer to get their story since book 2. The connection and inevitability of them has been woven throughout the series and getting to know West in this book was a delight. He is an adorable marshmallow that deserves all the love. Sawyer.....he bugged. I was so utterly frustrated with him and I felt like he didn't even have to work to prove that he was worthy of West's love or attentiveness. Like, West just loved him and was this precious gem waiting for Sawyer to notice. West gave and gave and gave and Sawyer took it all without really giving anything back.
What I wanted was for West to tell Sawyer to fuck right off. Purposely sabotaging West's dates was not cute. It made Sawyer an asshole and I wanted him to be called out so bad. By West, by SOMEONE! You don't get to have your cake and eat it too. Sawyer needed to do some soul searching and should have been stepping up his game not to lose WEST, not West continually trying to prove he was mature enough or really just enough for Sawyer. It was incredibly unbalanced and frustrating that Sawyer really had to do nothing but say "yes".
Soo....apparently I am more angry about this than I originally thought. It just could have been such a better story if Sawyer redeemed himself to West. That after 3 years of West doing everything right, Sawyer was the one to prove himself. And the way Sawyer finally came clean about why he was so reluctant was underwhelming. Sawyer spent almost the whole book holding himself back and West just accepts it and moves on. I just.....ugh......it bugs.
Anyway! I am really sad about this. I've loved this series and although they all haven't been great, it's been pretty solid. I hope Miller and Apollo get their story and it's more flushed out.
”Anything is possible when you don’t try to stop love from growing where it wants to take root.”
[3.75] Coming back to this series is like being wrapped in a warm, cozy blanket. I can’t explain how much I live for Four Bears shenanigans!
This time we have a best friends to lovers story with minimal angst and tons of laughs, an overall delightful read. While a standalone, this story’s best read after the others, especially Ollie’s book, otherwise the beginning might feel a bit sudden and rushed.
West is a total sweetheart with the kindest soul, and I love how he’s always selflessly looking out for others. One of my favorite MCs of the series hands down. As for Sawyer, it takes a while for him to yield and take his first hesitant step toward a relationship. Now, I was able to distance myself enough to find a jealous Sawyer sabotaging West’s dates to be rather endearing and hilarious (flesh-eating rash anyone? 😂), but I also know this comes across as incredibly immature so if reading about such behavior bugs you, I don't think you'll like Sawyer very much. I do wish we saw more of Sawyer doing things for West so the relationship didn't feel so one-sided at times, but maybe they just have different love languages (West is the epitome of Acts of Service lol). As long as West is happy, I'll support his choice!
Anyhow, a final celebratory honk honk for Stud, Peaches, and their geese children! Hopefully we get to see more of what we caught a glimpse of in the epilogue, and of course, I’m more than ready for future Four Bears adventures (Miller, Apollo, I’m looking at you guys!) 💖
DNF @ 55% - tapping out with no rating, because at this point I would not be kind. I really don't like Sawyer in this. West is a better man in every possible way, and in no way does Sawyer deserve him.
I'd rather imagine West saw the light, kicked Sawyer to the curb, and ends up finding someone who's actually worthy of him and they fall deeply in love and live happily ever after. ✌️