Honestly I loved this cover to cover. I'm not someone who is at all well-versed in the romance genre, much less the gay romance genre, MUCH less the spicy gay romance genre, but this was such a fun foray into this kind of book. It was mindless fun, and while I would have loved a bit more depth in some of our non-main characters, I found this to be vivid, sweet, and hot.
We open following Luke, a 27 year old aspiring musician living the starving artist lifestyle. Freshly out of a toxic relationship and freshly moved out of LA, Luke made friends with a guy named Austin who is an employee at Bear Camp, a clothing optional campground in Georgia. Having shared his lack of employment and money, Austin offers to drive Luke to the campground where he can surely be set up with some temporary weekend work during the opening of the season. After making the drive up, Luke finds his footing helping out where he's needed. Enter Coleman Sawyer, the owner of the campground. Already stressed and stretched too thin, he doesn't really have time to help out this new guy Luke, but he can't seem to keep his mind off of him, drawn to his "Surfer Cowboy" charm. After a storm wrecks Luke's tend, Coleman obviously can't just let him sleep out in the rain. As the two learn more about each other, a deep connection forms, but Luke's uncertain future and temporary stay at Bear Camp looms over them. Also they have sex a few times.
I was shocked with how easy this was to read. That's not a criticism, it's just wildly digestible. The prose was extremely straightforward, but never clunky. This allowed for really rich, vivid descriptions of the setting. I've never been to a clothing optional gay campground before, despite living right next to one, but this made me feel like I was walking right into a place I was intimately familiar with. Ironically enough, it reminded me of my childhood attending church camp, but with only slightly more gay sex.
As you might expect in a romance book, the character work of our main duo was great. Both distinct and charming in their own ways, if not both a bit TOO perfect. While there weren't a ton of side characters that had a prominent role in the story, I loved Jim because Jim is someone all gay men probably know and are SO fortunate to know. But other than him, I do wish we got to spend a bit more time with the other side characters. Austin was mostly absent, and we even took the time to learn names and get descriptions of characters who ultimately had no bearing on the story. And while there was a kind of "villain" of the story, I don't think the narrative did quite enough to make me dislike him as much as I was supposed to. Honestly, I think I just wish this was longer, I would have loved more time to flesh out the story and maybe get some more sex in there.
I'm not a prude, but generally I don't really like sex scenes in books. I find them a bit cringey and misplaced. I expected them here though, and I thought they were done really well. As a gay man familiar with gay sex, I could tell the author knew what he was describing, and that made me appreciate it. I'll have to pick up the rest of the book in the series now!