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Seven Days #2

Unconditional Love

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"A Seven Days Story"

Can a person's life change in just one day? How about seven?

Donald Pottier and Jason Greene are barely more than boys when they meet on Chincoteague Island, Virginia. A day of crabbing soon turns them from strangers to friends, then to something more, but the boys' time is limited: at the end of the summer, Jay will leave Don and the island behind.

But Fate has more in store for Don and Jay than a summer of might-have-beens. Through eleven years of friendship, pain, love, loss, sickness, and misfortune, seven days stand out. Seven days define and shape the people they are and the relationship they share. Seven days of reunions and separations, accidents and serendipity, rejection and acceptance, disappointment and hope lay the foundation no romance can survive without: unconditional love.

164 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 12, 2012

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Andrew Grey

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 44 reviews
864 reviews230 followers
January 14, 2013

2.5 Stars

My first Andrew Grey book...hmmmm...

I wanted fluff…a sweet, no-brainer HEA. What I got was a downer story with bad writing.

For the first half of this book, I was really getting into it. Yes, it is depressing as all get out. This poor kid, Donny, has everything thrown at him, but he’s still so sweet. I actually shed tears for him! I wanted to crawl into my kindle and hug him and tell him I’ll take care of him. And the first-love story between Donny & Jay made my heart FULL.

And though the depressing situations kept bombarding me, I was still engaged. Good god…it was like “let’s fit in every shitty thing that can happen into one book”. But, I was set on Donny & Jay and wanted to see them make it in the end.

But, come about the 65% mark, it felt like a new author started writing the book. And the overall style changed which took the story, the writing, the characters, the dialogue into THIS-IS-RIDICULOUS-TOWN and it just started to drown in the cheesiness. I ended the book really borderline apathetic but ultimately annoyed.

Though the book is listed as #2 in a series, it works as a stand-alone. But, I’d pass altogether…
Profile Image for Grammy 1.
805 reviews18 followers
August 25, 2012
My first introduction to Andrew Grey author was his collaboration in a book I was reviewing for Amy Lane and Mary Calmes, called The Three Fates. So, now as I open my first story, it is his book, Unconditional Love, which I am reading. Like its title, the story is written in a series of 7 Days. The days, though, are not consecutive, sometimes skipping by years.

Day 1- we meet sixteen year old Donald Pottier. He lives in the small town of Chincoteague Island, Virginia. It is a summer beach community that lives for the tourists’ season. Donny shares his life in a small house with his mother, who works two jobs to keep them afloat. Donald is no slouch either, working at the local ice cream store, Mr. Whippy. He rides a bike to work, always looking over his shoulder for the school bully, Harmon Krepke, who terrorizes Donald and classmates, alike. Don and a school friend Kristen are dippin’ ice cream when Jason Greene arrives. Fate 101.

Jason comes from the wealthy side of the tracks, but has nothing Don does. His parents are rich, dismissive, and busy with their worlds, leaving this boy to revel in Don, and his mother’s warm home and closeness. Crabbing and crab cakes and swimming and kissing make for a fine summer as these two boys fall in love. This is such a quiet lovely love story of two young boys who find their soul mates at such a young age. Yes, they fall in love that summer, and Harmon Krepke, in a rage, ‘outs’ Jason to his family when he sees them kiss. Jason is swept away from Virginia not to be seen or heard from again. But Fate has other plans and it is:

Day 2 -Five years later, Donald and Jason are graduating from college and meet again. I will not spoil a moment of your voyage to read this wonderful story. The side characters are wonderful, but the story just grows with the trials the fates have in store for these young boys growing to the fine young men they can be. Join Jason and Donny and the next Five Days spanning their lives as Fate has them intersecting until they get it right. See how amazing it can be. It was poignant, heartbreaking and yet such a sweet read, I could not put it down. I invite you to give it a try. I do not think you will be sorry.



Review by Gloria Lakritz

Sr Reviewer and Review Chair for the Paranormal Romance Guild
Profile Image for Aine Massie.
Author 5 books84 followers
July 13, 2012
Andrew Grey has done it again! Yep, it’s thanks to his newly released Unconditional Love that I sat in front of my computer and cried, laughed, rooted for, and wanted to strangle characters that have pounced onto digital and paper today! I don’t normally need a box of tissues to read a M/M story, but Andrew seems to have me single-handedly supporting Kleenex, lol.

Unconditional Love is the story of Donald and Jason, two boys whose hearts are lost and the journey they travel to find each other despite separation and years.

The way Jay (Jason) touches and influences Don’s (Donald) life is touching and powerful.

The experiences and pain each man faces is beyond what many could imagine. Cancer, amnesia, prejudice, and personal conviction all work against a love that is meant to bring these two together. Can Don and Jay overcome everything in their way to happiness or will seven days not be enough?

Unconditional Love is a beautiful, emotional yet sweet and endearing story of two boys who learn to love and the men they become learning how to live and love together. As always with Andrew’s books, I devoured it in one sitting – yes I was up ‘till 4 AM again, ;) I can not praise Unconditional Love or Andrew Grey enough for this book! Simply wonderful!
Profile Image for Deja Dei.
125 reviews21 followers
August 14, 2012
4 stars for the beginning, and 2 for the end for 3-3.5. I really enjoyed the first probably three quarters of this book, in particular the beach setting, which was beautifully detailed, and the contrast between the way the setting is seen from the point of view of the tourists as opposed to the locals. I could almost smell the sea air as I read this, and it made a wonderful backdrop for a very sweet story of first love.

Jay and Donald's evolving relationship is tender, realistic, and well done as they meet, become friends, and then much more. Their youthful mistakes when it comes to dealing with each other are balanced out by how deeply they come to care about each other and some of the things they do to show it. It was very sweet and really makes you recall just how it feels to fall in love for the first time. The author evokes that lust and confusion very well, and it grows believably into commitment, at least as much commitment as possible between two teenage boys who are destined to be torn apart because they live so far from each other and have very different family situations. I really felt their pain when life seemed determined to keep them apart, and being just kids, they can't do much about it.

I also enjoyed the examination of what is really valuable in life and how these young men learn to recognize what really matters. One of them is poor but has a very caring, supportive mother, while the other is rich with selfish, uncaring parents. At first Donald envies what Jay has: a nice computer, a chance to go to college, etc, but he soon realizes he's the lucky one because his mother accepts him. Of course it's not that simple, though. Neither of their lives is perfect, but they support each other as much as they can.

Unfortunately, a plot turn about 120 pages in really ruined this story for me. It was just too impossible a coincidence, how these guys found each other again after many years, and I couldn't swallow it, even in a romance novel. More than that, it made me mad that the guys didn't work to stay in touch or find each other again, that it wasn't their love or commitment that brought them back to each other, but an unbelievable quirk of fate. I want to see my heroes get their happy ever after because they deserve it, not because of some impossible plot twist.
Profile Image for Shannon.
2,163 reviews45 followers
August 8, 2012
Oh my ever-lovin hell!! Bring me another box of tissues. I freaking loved, loved, loved this book. It felt like these guys were part of my family. I became a little to invested in them. Told over a 10 year span taking the seven days that were turning points in their relationship to explain the whole thing much like the original Seven Days. I didn't feel like I missed a single day! Highly, highly recommend this one.
Profile Image for Chris Beatty.
45 reviews2 followers
September 21, 2012
I really enjoyed this - not a series with a continuation of characters. Love as a skipping stone across the waters of time,... very romantic.
Profile Image for Marty90.
251 reviews
April 29, 2016
https://trelibrisoprailcielo.com/2016...

Eccoci qui con il secondo capitolo della serie “Seven Days”. Il primo libro lo avevo amato molto per le emozioni che mi aveva dato e per la storia che mi aveva catturato e questo secondo capitolo non è da meno. Grey, con la sua capacità di coinvolgerti, ha creato un’altra bella storia d’amore.

Donald Pottier è un giovane ragazzo che, per aiutare la madre, lavora in un bar gelateria e, un po’ per passione e un po’ per necessità, passa il resto del suo tempo a pescare granchi. Durante l’orario di lavoro incontra Jason Greene, un ragazzo che è in villeggiatura a Chincoteague Island. Con la scusa di imparare a pescare granchi, Jay avvicina Don dando così inizio a una grande amicizia.

Don vive solo con la madre, che si prende cura di lui con tutto il suo cuore e le sue forze, da quando il padre è morto in mare molti anni prima. Lui e Jay vengono da due famiglie molto diverse: da un lato Donald e la madre, che guadagnano giusto il necessario per poter vivere e sono sempre presenti l’uno per altro, e dall’altro Jason, che viene da una famiglia ricca, ma viene sempre lasciato solo dai genitori egoisti e concentrati solo sulle loro vite. Jason sarà spesso la salvezza di Donald, aiutandolo nei momenti più difficili, difendendolo dai bulli che spesso fanno di lui il loro bersaglio, e standogli vicino in ogni modo possibile. E Don non potrà fare altro che donargli tutto il suo cuore, anche a costo di soffrire. L’amicizia tra Don e Jay sarà messa sovente a dura prova, la lontananza e la mentalità omofoba di tante persone li allontaneranno spesso, ma il destino farà sempre in modo di farli incontrare. La loro amicizia si trasforma in un amore dolcissimo e appassionante, dando ai giovani tante gioie, ma anche tanti dolori. Se l’amore poi è incondizionato, c’è poco che le persone possono fare per allontanare i due innamorati. L’amore alla fine deve avere la meglio e Donald e Jason, l’amore, se lo meritano.

“Sei fantastico, Donald Pottier, e io dovrei saperlo bene, perché non potrei mai amare qualcuno che non fosse tanto straordinario.”

Come vi dicevo all’inizio ho amato molto anche questo secondo capitolo della serie. Grey ci accompagna in questa storia che sembra quasi reale, i dolori che si affrontano in questo libro sono veri. È come se Grey raccontasse una storia di quelle che viviamo nella nostra realtà e lo fa con maestria. Sa come coinvolgerti, come emozionarti e come farti sorridere. Lo stile di Grey è molto scorrevole e coinvolgente, il libro ti scorre davanti e tu puoi solo assistere alle vicende dei protagonisti, vivendo le loro stesse emozioni.

Il tema dei sette giorni l’avevo già apprezzato nel primo libro e mi è piaciuto molto anche in questo. Non sono sette giorni consecutivi, ma si dividono nell’arco di dodici anni. Sono sette giorni cardine nella vita di questi protagonisti, giorni che hanno deciso il loro destino, che li hanno fatti rincontrare e non sempre in circostanze piacevoli. Lo scrittore ci fa capire quanto l’amore sia importante nelle nostre vite, quanto possa aiutarci ad andare avanti e a sostenerci nei momenti più bui.

Si può benissimo leggere questo libro senza aver letto il precedente, essendo entrambi autoconclusivi e accumunati solo dal filone dei sette giorni, ma personalmente, avendo amato entrambi i libri, vi consiglio di leggere comunque anche il primo per non perdervi una bella storia. Avrete certamente capito che consiglio questo libro, a tutti i lettori che, come me, amano Andrew Grey e agli amanti delle storie d’amore. Ancora una volta quest’uomo ha saputo emozionarmi, raccontando una storia d’amore che ha sfidato e vinto tutti gli ostacoli che la vita mette di fronte. Mi ha lasciato con un sorriso sulle labbra e con la voglia di mangiare le famose polpette di granchio della mamma di Don! Super consigliato.
266 reviews3 followers
July 24, 2012
Unconditional Love: 7 Days Series #2

By Andrew Grey

In this series, Andrew Grey is proving that just 7 days out of a person’s life, sometimes those days are years apart, can change a person’s life course and set them on a different path.

In this one we have Donald Pettier and Jason Greene, two more unlikely friends you couldn’t find. Donald Pettier is from the Chincoteague Islands in Virginia. Jason is one of the summer visitors. They meet when Jason saves Donald from the town bullies. Donald teaches Jason the art of crabbing, and his mother fixes them crab cakes. Then Jason teaches Donald about video games, and they share their first kiss.

The next summer gave Donald and Jason two life changing days, then it was five years before they saw each other and their life’s were set on a different course. Through this Donald had loved Jason through the anger, and feelings of betrayal, Jason had always remained his first love, and he Jason’s.

Five years later, Donald is at the oncologists, he had cancer, and his doctor’s new intern was Jason. They had a beautiful night and made a commitment. When Donald awoke, Jason was gone… and he didn’t have his number. Three weeks passed and he hadn’t heard from him. He mentioned it at his next appointment only to find out that Jason had responded to an emergency beep and got into an accident. He had been in the hospital in a coma for three weeks. When Donald reached the hospital, Jason had woken up, but he couldn’t remember anything. Slowly through the day, Donald showed him bits of their life together, and Jason started to remember until finally it had all come back.

A year later all of Donald’s chemo treatments were over and they were back on the Island again. Seven life changing days over half a lifetime that shows how love endures and changes as people change and adapt. A beautiful story that wrapped me up in warmth and kept me moving from one chapter to another, I had to know what happened! Mr. Grey you have done it again. Taken us on a journey that it takes time to recover from; a rollercoaster of highs and lows, love and hate, anger and forgiveness the whole gambit of human emotions. You get to knows these people so well that you cry for them, laugh with them, cheer them on and hope against hope for that happy ever after that Mr. Grey never fails to give us, but keeps us guessing about in this one. Another five star rating for you, a must read for anyone that loves tales of love and how people interact. Unconditional Love shows itself in so many ways in this book between so many people, a true joy to read.!
Profile Image for Anita Bianchi.
581 reviews8 followers
May 14, 2016
http://bianchianita1971.blogspot.it/2...

Devo ammettere che questa seconda storia della serie "Sette Giorni" mi ha convinta: avevo trovato il primo romanzo troppo frammentato e scollato, mentre qui ho trovato una narrazione fluida ed avvincente. L'espediente narrativo usato è sempre lo stesso: raccontare la vicenda dei due protagonisti seguendoli in sette giorni fondamentali della loro vita. Donny e Jay si conoscono da adolescenti durante le vacanze estive e si innamorano, ma poi, a causa delle vicende della vita e della stupidità di altri, vengono separati. Ci saranno però sempre l'uno per l'altro nei momenti che contano. È forse una storia con un registro più drammatico rispetto ad altre di questo autore ma non perde l'ottimismo di fondo che lo caratterizza. I due protagonisti poi sono meravigliosi: Donald è un ragazzo forte ma anche vulnerabile, mentre Jason è altruista e amorevole.
Cosa dirvi? Leggetelo se vi è piaciuto il primo romanzo della serie ma anche se non vi ha convinti: qui la storia vi catturerà e vi terrà avvinti fino alla fine!
Profile Image for Tara.
941 reviews59 followers
August 24, 2012
I love the seven days concept. But again I wanted to exchange days. The final day we read about I wish was something more in the future. Like I need to know more about what the distant future holds for these two. I think the story of Donny and Jay was sweet, but it almost felt like there were too many coincidences that kept bringing them back together. I wish it was more active meetings between these two. But it was still a good read, and you really did continue to root for these two even through the end. I guess it is just I feel unsettled about them. I would love a book called the 8th day that eventually revisits all the couples that are in the 7 dyas series (obviously after a few more). But I really do enjoy the writing, and I'll keep coming back.
Profile Image for Antonella.
1,521 reviews
October 21, 2012
A terribly sugary and dramatic reading, Harlequin comes to mind...
Profile Image for Monika .
2,333 reviews39 followers
March 28, 2020

2.5 Stars

This turned out to be not at all what I was expecting. I thought I was going to get a sweet first and forever love story, which it was in a way, but so much sadness happens it was hard for me to fall in love with it. I think this is another book that I have to put on my "it might be me not the book" shelf.

TAGS
-- sugary sweet but not light reading -- too much sadness -- filled with angst -- how not to be parents -- one mean bully -- one loving mother -- friends to lovers -- first love -- first time -- loved the MCs... Don & Jay -- sweet HEA
Profile Image for Sammy Goode.
628 reviews85 followers
August 3, 2013
“But I see you as you. You are who you are, and that’s pretty amazing to me.”…”Never let anyone make you feel less than you are…”

Love comes to us in all forms, some as simple as an off the cuff tossed out goodbye or an often overused sentiment. If we are very lucky, we hear it from a person we have chosen to live out the rest of our lives with or perhaps as a precious affirmation from a child. But the power of those words, “I love you” is so often lost over time and too often nothing more than a meaningless phrase merely rattled off during a hasty goodbye. Rarely does it stand the test of time.

Unconditional Love by Andrew Grey shows us a love that not only transcends the casual but stands the test of time and distance and family forces that threaten at each turn to destroy it. It relates the story of two boys turned men who will nurture it, over the span of a decade or more.

Donny Pottier lives with his mother on the eastern shore of the U.S., barely scraping by in a near poverty existence together, after the death of his father years before. His life, while simple, is one he enjoys, despite the constant threat of bullying by the town thugs. He is quiet, sweet, fiercely loyal and loving to his mother and…gay. Every summer his small town opens its doors to the tourist trade. One summer Jason (Jay) comes to stay with his wealthy, often absent parents.

Jason, whose parents often look through rather than at their son, give him free rein. He is a ball of energy, but kind and generous. He lives under the iron rule of a father who, as a surgeon, will eventually buy his son’s compliance in most things. Jason, having never really wanted for anything, will eventually be trapped by the money and opportunity his father will hold over his head and be forced to turn away from the most important thing in his life…his love for another boy. Jason is gay, in a family that hates the very word, much less the lifestyle.

The two boys meet…fall deeply in love and their story unfolds over the next decade and more. It is one of missed chances, forced separations, miscommunications, doubts, and finally…the threat of terminal illness. Through it all, one thing will remain, fierce and strong, often buried, yet right beneath the surface…that first love…that one love…that, “we are meant to be” love.

Unconditional Love is admittedly a sweet, sweet romance. If you have come to this novel expecting an in-depth analysis of relationships, or some gritty realistic trope about love and angst and loss and so forth…well, dear reader than you have come to the wrong place. Author Andrew Grey, unapologetically, writes a sweet story of first love and of how its strength can stand the test of time.

I have no doubt that many will look at this story and say that it was too easy, to easily tied up into a pretty package. They will watch as Unconditional Love follows the lives of these two boys into manhood and shake their head at the implausibility of the “insta-love” factor surviving the test of time and distance.
I will tell you that there were times when I shook my own head and thought that this story was a bit too predictable—that surely this time the stumbling blocks the author chose to include and throw down into this relationship would cause it to implode and crumble. I thought that the author was very brave in unapologetically stating that there are people who fall in love at an early age and are able to maintain that same deep level of love over years of separation. Brave, but…well a bit sappy too.

But…therein lies the beauty of Andrew Grey and this 7 days series. He stands in the face of all the barriers and, I assume, critics, and says—here is a story—it is sweet, it has a touch of angst, but it also is filled with hope…and love…and the notion that happy ever after truly exists.

The story is well written. Mr. Grey is a master storyteller, and his characters are rich and full—they leap off the page, fully developed and achingly familiar and land with a solid thump into our hearts where they nestle in and take up space for a while.

Perhaps my only criticism with this kind of story is that there is so much thrown at the main characters—that sometimes it borders on the unrealistic that cannot be overlooked. After a while, the roadblocks the author devises, tended to wrench me from the story and I felt myself groaning just a bit and wanting him to “get on with it”—to let this couple “catch a break” for once.

However, this was minor to an overall beautifully written story of love—love that dares to look life and all its snares and hurts in the eye and say, we will survive and blossom despite the forces that are intent on pulling us apart.
Profile Image for Cinzia.
381 reviews12 followers
May 6, 2016
4.5 stelle
Il primo amore non si scorda mai, ma cosa succede quando questo coincide con il vero e unico amore della tua vita e il destino riesce a separarti?
La storia di Don e Jay raccontata in “Amore incondizionato” ha inizio durante la loro adolescenza. Jay è in vacanza con i suoi genitori, nella loro residenza estiva a Chincoteague Island, l’isola dove abita da sempre Don insieme alla madre. I due ragazzi si incontrano casualmente, diventano amici e poi tra loro nasce un sentimento più tenero, profondo e importante. Diventano l’uno il mondo dell’altro, sono felici e sereni durante il tempo che trascorrono insieme e vivono il loro amore nel modo più completo.
Don ha perso il padre durante la sua infanzia, vive insieme alla madre e la loro situazione economica non è delle più floride, se non proprio al limite della povertà. È consapevole di avere preclusa ogni speranza di realizzare i suoi sogni e costruirsi un futuro migliore lontano dall’isola, ma vive questa sua condizione con serenità, perché in realtà possiede una delle cose più importanti al mondo: l’amore di sua madre, con la quale ha un rapporto meraviglioso.
Jay, al contrario, proviene da una famiglia piena di soldi, che però non gli mostra il minimo segno di affetto e attenzione: è una cosa che lo fa soffrire, ma colma questa lacuna grazie all’amore di Don e al calore della madre di quest’ultimo.
“Amore incondizionato” è un libro che parla non solo della storia d’amore tra Jay e Don, ma ci mostra anche un’altra “forma” di amore veramente incondizionato, quello della madre di Don per suo figlio, un amore smisurato, toccante, che ha saputo trasmettere a Donny la forza di questo sentimento e il suo valore.
La storia nata tra Don e Jay, però, viene fortemente contrastata dal padre di quest’ultimo, che ha sempre nutrito una forte avversione per l’omosessualità e una volta scoperta la relazione del figlio con Don lo obbliga a interrompere tutti i ponti.
In un primo momento vedere Jay assecondare l’imposizione del padre mi ha delusa, sono la classica persona che vede o tutto bianco o tutto nero e avrei preferito una sua presa di posizione più ribelle. Poi andando avanti a leggere il libro mi sono ricreduta… alla fine il gesto romantico di una ribellione romantica avrebbe portato davvero a qualcosa di positivo nella vita di Jay e Don? Erano così giovani che forse la dura realtà, senza soldi e tra mille difficoltà li avrebbe distrutti in un altro modo.
Non che la vita di Don sia stata facile, tutt’altro. Riesce a costruirsi un futuro, in parte anche grazie a Jay che lo ha spinto a seguire i suoi sogni, ma per farlo ha dovuto pagare il suo prezzo.
Il bello di questa serie “Sette giorni” è che l’autore, per raccontare la storia d’amore dei suoi protagonisti, sceglie di farlo mostrandoci quello che è avvenuto nei sette giorni che sono diventati quelli più importanti della loro vita, a volte spostando il lasso temporale anche di diversi anni, ma rendendo molto più completa la visione di quello che è accaduto nelle vite, è l’unico filo conduttore comune tra i vari libri, che possono considerarsi in questo modo autoconclusivi.
Con il passare degli anni nella vita di Don ci sono stati diversi momenti difficili e pesanti, ma non si è mai ritrovato a doverli affrontare da solo, in quei momenti Jay è sempre stato presente, in un modo o nell’altro pur essendo lontano, è sempre stato pronto a materializzarsi al suo fianco, per offrirgli un abbraccio e il suo conforto. Credo che sia la vera risposta che tutti si aspettano dalla persona amata e l’unica per la quale non si ha mai il coraggio di chiedere.
Questo è quello che amo di più nei libri scritti da Andrew Grey: la dolcezza e l’intensità dei sentimenti che possiamo trovare nelle storie d’amore che ci racconta, insieme alla loro passione, che però rimane solo una delle sfaccettature dei sentimenti che legano i suoi protagonisti, non è mai l’unico elemento a tenere unita la coppia, ma con l’andare del tempo diventa la ciliegina sulla torta nel loro rapporto.
“Amore incondizionato” è un bel libro da leggere, emozionante, coinvolgente, un po’ dolce e un po’ amaro, che ti fa capire quanto sia bello e importante avere al tuo fianco la persona che ami.

Profile Image for Amneris Cesare.
Author 37 books54 followers
May 10, 2016
http://babettebrown.it/recensione-amo...

Don e Jay hanno 16 anni quando si conoscono. Don vive su un’isola abitata da pescatori e braccianti ed è orfano di padre, pescatore morto anni prima in mare. Vive con la madre in una piccola casetta modesta e per mantenersi svolte ogni sorta di lavoretto. Spesso va a pescare i granchi, per permettere a lui e a sua madre di cenare in maniera decente. Jay invece è il figlio di un ricco chirurgo plastico, e trascorre l’estate in una bellissima villa che i suoi hanno comprato per capriccio ed è sempre solo. Il padre è troppo preso dal suo lavoro, la madre da interessi diversi per prendersi cura di lui. Nessuno dei due lo conosce e lo capisce.
Don e Jay iniziano ad andare a pescare granchi insieme e diventano inseparabili. L’estate successiva si baciano per la prima volta e dichiarano di amarsi. Don scopre che la madre è malata di cancro e Jay lo consola. Don gioca con un computer che Jay gli ha regalato e crea un bellissimo video gioco, Jay di nascosto invia il video gioco a una facoltà di High Tech che offre a Don una borsa di studio per laurearsi. Jay e Don si amano per la prima volta e la vita sembra avere un lieto fine per loro dietro l’angolo. Ma un bullo di paese che ha sempre tormentato Don, fa la spia con i genitori di Jay e il padre omofobo, reagendo male, allontana Jay da Don trascinandolo via dall’isola. Inizia così un calvario per Don e Jay che si concluderà dopo dodici anni tra alti e bassi e lunghe separazioni.


Questa la storia di Unconditional Love.

È un romanzo che contiene al suo interno i temi classici delle storie M/M: un amore giovanile che sboccia tra la melma delle difficoltà quotidiane, due personaggi principali che hanno il loro bagaglio di sfortune e incomprensioni sulle spalle e che si sostengono a vicenda per superarle e sopravvivere; il “cattivo” che impedisce il loro amore e li separa; il tempo che gioca a rimpiattino con i loro sentimenti e li fa incontrare e poi separare di nuovo; una discreta dose di angst e… sesso. Sesso descritto con dovizia di particolari e frasi a effetto e in stereofonia.

La storia non è originalissima e tutta la trama trasmette la sensazione di dejà vu a ogni pagina. I personaggi sono però abbastanza a fuoco, anche se per la particolare struttura narrativa, la maggior parte della storia è raccontata e non mostrata. Lo stile è semplice, poco impegnativo così come le tematiche non sono complesse e non lasciano trasparire chiaroscuri degni di nota. Tutto è molto chiaro, perfettamente delimitato e circoscritto in questo romanzo di Andrew Grey. Le pagine dolorose sono volutamente descritte in modo da far scendere la lacrimuccia al lettore e le – poche – pagine gioiose eseguono il loro dovere a pennello.

Un romanzo, questo, rivolto a chi ama il genere M/M semplice e diretto, che vuole la sofferenza aumenti prima della pagina finale del lieto fine col botto, senza troppi sconvolgimenti e di certo nessun approfondimento psicologico; che apprezzi scene di sesso esplicite a coronamento e consolazione delle tribolazioni e tragedie di vita. Trama non originale, già vista in altri contesti, descrizioni semplici, facili, nessuno sforzo stilistico particolare. Traduzione buona anche se in alcuni punti lievemente traballante – specialmente nelle pagine dove il sesso è descritto con minuzia – che nulla toglie e nulla aggiunge al testo.
Profile Image for Romance and Fantasy for Cosmopolitan Girls.
3,070 reviews77 followers
April 27, 2016
Romance and Fantasy for Cosmopolitan Girls
Andrew Grey sa come trasmettere forti emozioni e in questo libro non ne risparmia nessuna. L’amore incondizionato a cui fa riferimento il titolo non è solamente quello tra Donnie e Jay, ma soprattutto quello di una madre per il proprio figlio.

La mamma di Don è una vera eroina nell'amare senza riserve, nel sacrificare tutto per la felicità del figlio, nel lottare fino all'ultimo respiro contro il cancro, è lei il vero esempio che tutti i genitori dovrebbero seguire. Risalta ancor di più se confrontata con la madre assente (anche se poi si riscatterà) e con il padre omofobo e rabbioso di Jay.
Personaggi secondari che non hanno nulla da invidiare in quanto a caratterizzazione agli stessi protagonisti.


Jason, solare ed energico, appassionato, ma anche timoroso per via dell’atteggiamento repressivo del padre e così bisognoso d’amore.
Donald timido e sfuggente, ma certo negli affetti e così desideroso di trovare qualcun altro come lui, con cui dividere i sogni e l’amore che sente così forte nel petto.
Due ragazzi profondamente diversi sia per carattere che per estrazione sociale che si incontrano a sedici anni, si amano, si perdono, ma che il destino farà poi riunire. Un amore che attraversa gli anni, affronta nuove relazioni, ma che non si spegnerà mai.


Una narrazione che si svolge in soli sette giorni, ma suddivisi in un arco temporale di dodici anni, sette giorni fondamentali nella vita di due anime gemelle che niente e nessuno potrà mai dividere.

Una storia ricca di emozioni, passione, amore, ma anche tristezza e drammi perché, purtroppo, la vita riserva sia il bello che il cattivo tempo e la vera forza è saperli affrontare entrambi.
Profile Image for Andrea.
979 reviews10 followers
August 14, 2012
I picked this book up because I was intrigued by the concept of just seven days throughout the course of an eleven year relationship being able to define and shape it. If you read as much as I do, you start to notice that a lot of storylines are very similar. When I read the blurb I thought Unconditional Love looked like a book that would be different.

There were a few hurdles I had to overcome right off the bat. I usually don’t care for young adult or teen love stories. I have my reasons, but I don’t really think you care so I’ll spare you the details :). Anyway, the book begins with Don and Jason meeting when they’re 16 years old. The first half of the book, three of the seven days, covers their relationship over the course of two summers. Normally that would be way too much time spent with underage boys for me, but this book was different.

I was immersed in their lives. The boys were dealing with some pretty difficult situations that a lot of adults wouldn’t be able to cope with. The depth of their love and the complexity of their struggles drew me in. I loved the innocent naivete they had even while their pain had me wiping away a couple tears. The last half of the book covers their relationship through adulthood where they were still dealing with the aftermath of events from those first two summers. I don’t want to give anything away about the exact nature of their problems. I’ll simply say that the love from unexpected sources and the lack of it where it should be expected was brilliantly depicted.

Unconditional Love is the perfect title for this book. A lot of M/M romance can do passion, hot sex and angst but this book brought them all together in a beautiful story showcasing the many versions of love. It was as if their bond was strengthened and tempered as they drifted in and out of each others lives over the years. At times their story was heartbreaking and at other times it was uplifting. I love books like this!
Profile Image for T.M. Smith.
Author 28 books316 followers
January 20, 2013
I was completely enthralled with this book from the first chapter. Donald Pottier has lived his life on the island with his mother. He has resinged himself to a life just shy of poverty, never thinking he'll have the means to go to college and make a better life for himself. Jason Greene is the proverbial rich kid that wants for nothing; except for the unconditional love of his parents. These two meet and become fast friends after Jason saves Donald from the town bullies. Friendship becomes attraction and then love as these two grow closer with every passing day. When Donald learns his mom has cancer, Jason drops everything to rush to his side. When Jason's dad learns of the affair he suddenly becomes interested in his sons life and quickly removes him from Donald's.

As a parting gift, Jason gives Donald a gift he won't soon forget.

In his final year of college, litterly weeks before graduation, Donald gets the heartbreaking news that his mother has finally succumbed to her cancer. And just like he did so many years before, Jason is by his side at the funeral. Jason offers him one more night; to love each other, touch each other and share one more night of passion. As tempting as it is, Donald wants all or nothing. So he watches the love of his life, walk out of his life, again.

This book has more ups and downs than the Texas Giant! Just when you think "Yay, they found each other again." you just get smacked with "Oh goddamn, what now!" I assure you though, that the ride is definitely worth it in the end. This book is erupting with emotions; happiness and sadness, anger and hatred, love and passion. There isn't an emotion on the spectrum that this story doesn't cover, and Grey conveys those emotions on paper with realism, heartache and determination. I told the author when we did our interview that I was dubbing him the M/M Nicholas Sparks. His stories are always bittersweet, poignant, uplifting and beautiful condensed into roughly 200 pages!
Profile Image for Gaby Franz.
Author 38 books54 followers
May 24, 2015
Andrew Grey “me puede” y eso es innegable. Es una persona sensible que sabe llegar a mi corazón como lectora y como ser humano. No he encontrado ninguna novela escrita por él que no haya tocado con su pluma las fibras más íntimas en mi.

Y “Amor Incondicional” no es la excepción.

La historia es verdaderamente preciosa y super-romántica. Describe un amor que nace en la adolescencia con el descubrimiento sexual, cómo en siete días puede pasar lo más maravilloso y lo peor de todo. ¿Cómo recordarías esos días, bien o mal? A pesar de todo, Donny y Jason prefieren guardar los mejores recuerdos de esos días tan especiales, porque estuvieron juntos para afrontar lo malo, y lo bueno. Su vida juntos transcurre con muchos baches de tiempo en el medio, años de no verse, reencuentros, nuevas separaciones y ¿al fin juntos?

Debo decir que este libro está indicado para los románticos empedernidos. Te hará llorar, reír, suspirar y maldecir una y otra vez. Y, tal como a mi me gusta, Andrew no decepciona con el final pero ¡me quedé con ganas de más!

Esta saga está basada en los siete días más importantes de una relación, la de dos hombres que se aman a pesar del tiempo, de las distancias, de los sinsabores. Es una idea original, no voy a negarlo, pero a mi en lo personal no me termina de convencer los baches que me deja como lector el saltar en el tiempo en cada capítulo. Siento que se pierde la continuidad de alguna manera, la intensidad de los sentimientos que me provocó el llegar al final de un capítulo, para comenzar todo de nuevo en el siguiente. ¿Será que no me gustan las montañas rusas? Porque así me sentí mientras leía esta novela. En un sube y baja de emociones, en no decidirme si me gustaba eso o no.
Profile Image for Becky Condit.
2,377 reviews66 followers
July 22, 2012
4 1/2 stars!

Tear-jerker. Andrew Grey writes passionate stories but they are not usually quite as emotionally intense as UNCONDITIONAL LOVE. Two teenagers, both gay, one poor, the other rich, meet one summer and connect soulfully.
Mr. Grey is right in his premise. You never know what the lifetime result of the incidents of one day, let alone a series of days will be. I loved the characters’ growth in this story from one timid teenager and one confident teenager to two strongly self-assured, successful men. The HEA is hard earned and pleasing. Mr. Grey can pull at my heart-strings anytime.
Please see my complete review on July 29, 2012 at http://mrsconditreadsbooks.com/index....
Profile Image for Dave.
786 reviews7 followers
January 6, 2024
This is my first experience with a "seven days" book. That is, a story told through the events of seven "key" days in the lives of the main characters. In this case the seven days spanned about twelve years. It was quite well done. Very interesting to see the changes as the characters matured.

This a gay romance that “proves” that some people are destined to be together from the very start. Some of the sex scenes are pretty racy. Much of the book is focused on the characters and the true meaning of love both, sexual and parental.
Profile Image for Debi.
654 reviews
October 23, 2016
There's a bit of emotion in these 7 days that change the lives of two teenage boys over the course of 11 years. A few tears too. Their love is sweet and endearing and stands the test of time and distance as well as lack of contact. The story flows well but lacks real challenge. Jay's love is deep and very obvious in everything he shares with Donny. Donny loves Jay but doesn't have as much faith in the lasting effect of their feelings. The story is simple and charming but nothing intense. Basically, a tiny bit emotional but feel good read.
Profile Image for Lisa.
3,455 reviews136 followers
October 22, 2022
Ill be honest I wasn't sure what to expect from the book. Don and Jay meet when they are 16 and the book takes us through 7 days in their lives until they are in their late 20s.
For the majority of the time, they aren't together as fate seems to have a hand in it. Eventually, they are both in Wisconsin and illness brings them back into each other's lives.
As you only get 7 days of the many years, I did feel I missed things and when one of the days represented something significant and then the next chapter had moved on by months or even years. However on the whole I did enjoy it.
Profile Image for Natalija.
1,137 reviews
March 18, 2013
Another wonderful read by one of my favourite authors. I enjoyed it slightly less than Seven Days, the first book in the series, if only because I was kind of disappointed when Jay didn't try to keep in touch with Donny, but again, there wouldn't be a book if he did. This is definitely a recommended read from me.
147 reviews
September 9, 2012
Liked the story and the concept of the seven significant days in the relationship. However, the writing felt awkward at times, and the dialogue can be rather speech-like. Nothing about the two protagonists' personalities stood out to me, and so I didn't feel invested in their relationship. May be because the events are so spaced out, their relationship was not very believable to me.
Profile Image for Heather Lankford.
15 reviews
September 8, 2012
Donald's and Jason's relationship was a fabulous story. It broke my heart several times through out the story. What they went through from finding each other, and being forced apart. Coming together again to be pulled apart yet again. Illness, death, and a horrible father! But love always finds it's way back again. Great book!!
Profile Image for CB.
3,193 reviews6 followers
January 10, 2016
This is the 2nd book in the series but a complete stand alone - no involvement with the first book except they revolve around 7 pivotal days in the MC'S lives. This book is written so the 7 days are specifically spelled out and a little easier to identify.

I also enjoyed this book and hope the author keeps the "7 day" theme going with more!
Profile Image for Rick.
218 reviews16 followers
July 22, 2012
Andrew Grey is an amazing Author first of all. This series, this being the second book is his best work. I've read every books he's written and I can't say enough that the 7 series is his best work. This book was so amazing - LOVED IT, LOVED IT!!!!!!
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