More accurately, it's 4.5 stars.
I received an ARC from the author in exchange for an honest review.
This review has been originally posted at Gay Book Reviews - check it out!
Trey Bishop comes from a rich but dysfunctional family. Pushed by an over-ambitious mother into a TV-show career when he was 8, he has become a drug-addicted and jobless Hollywood bad-boy and, after an umpteenth stay in rehab, is currently struggling to sort out his life, all the while trying to steer clear of his egocentric family. What he does whenever he feels the mad craving for drugs pulsing in his veins is to go for a run, whatever the time of day (or night). That’s how, one night, he stumbles upon a couple of suspect guys moving a heavy package around a dark back-alley in Los Angeles’ Koreatown. As he stares at them, they let the bundle fall… and a strangely familiar-looking corpse grins at Trey. He tries to flee, but the men run after him and try to shoot him. He’s rescued by Kuro Jenkins, the handsome Asian owner of the ramen shop where Trey likes to eat out from time to time, who shows up just in time, gun in hand, and chases the bad guys off.
What Trey doesn’t know is that Kuro has a shady past. After having been groomed as a master thug by a major player of the Los Angeles underworld, Kuro has become a Black Ops agent for the government. More than once, he’s been involved in questionable rescue missions, but ever since his cover has been blown during one of those, he has retired despite his young age and has opened his little restaurant, content to do what he always loved to do: cook Asian meals. Never would he have dreamed that the handsome but distant and sad-looking young customer he frequently sees in his shop would turn his newly found quiet life upside-down once again.
Because of course, both of them feel an instant mutual attraction. They’ve been ogling each other for months, but each one having issues to sort out, they haven’t dared make the first move. Now, as it becomes clearer and clearer someone wants to violently prevent Trey from talking about the nightly incident and the body he’s seen, Kuro feels an unexplainable need to protect the tormented young man. To do so means to investigate who’s after Trey and why. Therefore, they spend quite a lot of time together and finally admit to each other that they’re rather rapidly falling in love.
This book was rather a mixed bag for me. The crime plot grabbed my attention at once (nothing beats a thrilling whodunnit, right?), and the main characters were endearing and interesting. I admit the insta-love-thread was a bit too abrupt for my taste, and the careful use of editing “scissors” would have tightened up the story (do we need to know in detail how Kuro’s former boss’s chateau looks like?). Some dialogues felt a bit off, too—hardly anybody really spills out their feelings quite as openly as the two guys did after having known each other for only a couple of days. And of course, if you’re allergic to shootings and killings, you should not pick up this book. I’m not a huge fan of either, yet felt this was fiction, and the more violent scenes were not gratuitous, but rather fit in with the story-line, so it was okay for me. The writing style was sometimes a bit odd, too (another author seemingly loath to use past perfect tense), but when I closed the book, the overall impression was positive. Yep, despite some quibbles, I did like this book. Lovers of crime fiction, this one’s definitely for you.