Overall, a very good book. This is only my second outing with this author, and I enjoyed the first book I read too.
This is about Archer, a 20 year old college student who is a virgin, but more because he seems gray-asexual than anything else. He knows he's gay, but he's actually rarely attracted to anyone.
When his friends, twins Caleb and CJ, bring him to a gay strip club for his birthday, Archer isn't even really turned on by all the scantily clad men, and even finds the guy on stage gyrating on stage looking a little funny than sexy.
But then one stripper catches his eye, Phoenix, his twin friends notice and ask for him to give Archer a private dance in the VIP rooms.
There is an instant connection between the two. There's something about Archer's sweet, shy, rambly demeanor that gets to Phoenix, and he breaks his rules by grinding on Archer full stop, when he usually doesn't allow touching. But Phoenix is the one to initiate the touching, and Archer is fully into it.
But they get interrupted, and it ends before it can be finished. But the connection between the two is there.
And with the end of Archer's sophomore year in college done in 2 weeks, he moves in with his uncle for the summer to help out at his tattoo shop.
And who should be living next door but Phoenix himself?
We don't get his age, but I assume he's somewhere in his early twenties.
Phoenix, two years prior to the start of the events in this book, had to start stripping when his mom, his only living relative, got sick and there were mountains and mountains of bills to pay. He had to give up his pursuit of his dream to write lyrics for songs to become a stripper to help pay the bills.
Flash forward two years, and he's still working as a stripper.
I very much enjoyed Archer and Phoenix together. They had a great chemistry and worked so well together. They were so sweet together too.
My only real complain and the reason for a star off is the slightly contrived drama near the end. It wasn't too bad, but I think the drama could have come about in a better way.
Because the big drama is that this other stripper, Aiden, was someone Phoenix had a fling with months and months ago, and he ended it, but Aiden still wants him, even though Phoenix very much doesn't, and he's insanely jealous of Archer.
So he does this whole elaborate thing to try to break Archer and Phoenix up - and it's so stupid too - and even when Archer finds this out, he's still unsure about Phoenix.
Because when he gets to the VIP area, he sees Aiden all grinding up on Phoenix, and Phoenix isn't pulling away right away, sure, but when Aiden trying to get all handsy with him, Phoenix pulls his arm away and stops him.
So...the only thing Archer has to be upset about is...Aiden - not Phoenix - grinding all up on him. But to Archer, it means something because Phoenix didn't pull away.
Even though...it's his job? Phoenix has said several times that he doesn't want Aiden and isn't interested in him, and it's obvious that it was all a set up on Aiden's part, and so Phoenix allows Aiden to dance all up on him for...what, a few moments? and because he "didn't stop him" that means Archer isn't sure he can trust him? EHhhhh, not buying it.
It wasn't as *gasp* inducing as I think the author was trying to go for. And Phoenix having to fake it and put on an act for the customers watching is literally his job. Even if inside he's disgusted by it, he has to pretend he isn't - as long as no one is touching him, of course. He's allowed to be angry at touching, but his job is to pretend to be 'on' and sexy and seductive for paying customers.
I guess Aiden being a coworker and not a customer is more of a grey area, idk. But Phoenix literally tells Archer that he was doing it to just get through it and be done with it, because he didn't want to be there doing that.
I just didn't really like Archer's attitude to that. That he needed to think about it. That he was all "But he didn't pull away" man...if it wasn't his work, and wasn't something he had to do for his job, I'd get that much more, I'd understand, because that would be of Phoenix's free will. THIS wasn't. And I'm sure there are strippers who love their job and don't mind it, of course, but Phoenix isn't one of them. He was only doing the job to get by and didn't like people touching him. He had his own rules of no touching, even, and Archer knew that.
And Archer even said himself that Phoenix hadn't given him any reason not to trust him. But then he's all the sudden scared he's being naive and maybe he shouldn't trust Phoenix so blindly? But Phoenix didn't actually do anything to shake Archer's trust and faith in him. It was his job and he was enduring to get through it. And he'd said multiple times he didn't want to work with Aiden, so...I'm just...
It felt fairly contrived for dramas sake, to have a reason to put these two on shaky ground for a spell before they work things out.
I didn't like it. Obviously lol.
Luckily it wasn't dragged out for an overly long time, but still...it was a flimsy thing used for drama.
But, aside from that part of the book, I enjoyed the rest of this immensely. I enjoyed everything leading up to it, and then once they got past it, everything after that.
So overall, a very good book that I'd definitely recommend. It just could have done better on creating drama that actually made sense for the characters.
But still, a definite two thumbs up from me. I'm happy and excited to delve into the next one!