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Catch and Release

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Joe McKenzie’s high-flying London life imploded six years ago, and it happened dramatically enough that paramedics were involved. That’s all in the past. Now, Joe couldn’t be happier living a solitary life as a fisherman on England’s wild northern coast.

Okay, he could be happier.

It’s not like he’s depressed or anything but, you know. The weather’s not great. Life’s a bit samey. He’s only thirty-eight. The idea of another forty years is a bit exhausting, to be honest. He passes the time pretending to be a fisherman but the truth is, he sucks at it.

Then Joe makes the catch of a lifetime when he stumbles across the mysterious Dave washed up on the beach—an enormous man with gills and uncanny power over the sea. Once Dave stops trying to kidnap Joe and/or kill Joe’s fishing buddy, Jerry, turns out he’s kind of…intriguing?

And not half as smooth as he seems to think he is.

There’s a lot Joe doesn’t know about Dave. He doesn’t know why Dave keeps disappearing or why he can’t seem to stay away. He doesn’t know what Dave wants from him. He doesn’t even know what, exactly, Dave is. And Joe can’t ask, because they don’t speak the same language.

Joe does know one thing, though. He is in love.

Which, great. How’s that going to end well?

Catch and Release is a gay paranormal romantic comedy featuring a truly terrible fisherman with an octopus phobia, a merman (maybe? Confirmation pending) with no sense of personal boundaries at all, constant communication fails, a whole lot of sea life not in the sea but in Joe’s house, yes, it’s dead, some epic yearning from both sides, some truly awkward sex, and bewilderingly enough, maybe a way to make it work?

267 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 16, 2022

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About the author

Isabel Murray

4 books199 followers
Isabel is a writer, a reader, and a lover of love. She couldn’t stick to a subgenre if her life depended on it, but MM romance is her jam. She lives in the UK, reads way too much, and cannot be trusted anywhere near chocolate.

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5 stars
323 (40%)
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282 (35%)
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146 (18%)
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44 (5%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 190 reviews
Profile Image for ☆ Todd.
1,337 reviews1,476 followers
June 20, 2022

Yaaaay, mermen! Or... NOT-mermen. Or something? 😆



This story pulled me in from the very moment that Joe and his friend Jerry stumbled across "something" caught up in a fishing net on the beach. "Something" 7 feet tall with a big ole' honking erection.

At 38 and having already retired, after making a fortune in stock investments, Joe mostly puttered around his beachfront home and fished as a hobby, so when the not-merman that they'd found, aka "Dave", began showing up more and more, he had plenty of free time to indulge in the sexy awkwardness that ensued.

Dave was extremely muscular, had gill slits, indigo blue hair, and as I'd previously mentioned, a constantly-engorged member, which felt a little cringey, but also pretty funny, especially when Joe's straight, older, fisherman friend was around.

For me, Jerry absolutely made the story, as he not only tried to be the hippest 60+ y.o. around, but also an ally as Joe and Dave began their often-ridiculous, hilarious mating dance.
“Am I freaking out? No. In fact, I’m checking him out.”

“Jerry. Don’t check him out.”

“Why not? I’m secure in my masculinity. I know about things like heteroflexibility and stuff. That boner is enormous and I’m telling you right here and now ain’t no part of me can stretch enough to take it, I don’t care how you do it, but I could…I could touch it. Yeah, I could see me touching it. See what it’s like.”
One of my favorite parts of the story was when Dave began actively courting Joe with gifts from the sea, then later on, after a near tragedy, when Joe found it necessary to court Dave right back.

Joe's reaction to the octopus was pretty funny, but the very best was when Joe was courting the aloof Dave, while Dave was because Joe was so completely shite at catching his own "gifts" for Dave.

I also liked how Joe and Dave's developing bond allowed them to sense when the other was close, which made the sadder parts of the story, when they were much easier to stomach.

I found the romance to be pretty touching, too, with the author doing a great job at portray Dave's adoration and love for Joe, in spite of the gigantic communication barrier between the two. Although, I do admit that their inability to fully understand one another was a wee bit frustrating at times.

The story wasn't perfect, but I did really enjoy this one, even if I was freaking dying to discover if more mermen existed, did they live in groups, what was Dave's back story, and other such details.

The book ended on a mostly happy note, but I was still sad that their HEA would require .

I'd rate this one at around 4.5 stars, rounding up, and recommend it to anyone looking for a merman story with a teeny feeling of bittersweet.

** SIDE NOTE: I wanted Joe to buy a small yacht with all of his money, fit Dave with

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Profile Image for Teal.
585 reviews177 followers
Shelved as 'dnf'
October 31, 2021
New-to-me author #69 of 2021 is…

…a keeper!

And yet this book is a DNF.

I swear it all makes sense.

The book showed up in my feed the other day, so I took a look at the blurb. It provoked two contradictory reactions: I found the merman premise of no interest, but the voice hooked me. I mean, how many blurbs even have a voice? Usually they’re neutral, a “just the facts” recitation of info. But in this case the author’s voice came shining through. I couldn’t resist giving the book a try in the hopes it would be as much fun to read as the blurb.

And it was! Humor is so subjective, and there can be a fine line between “funny” and “trying too hard,” but this came down on the right side of the line. At least to as far as I read (23%).

But, sure enough, I reeeeeeally am not interested in the premise. That’s what drove me off. Monsterfucking… eh, not my thing. I might have been able to stick around longer, but the size/strength discrepancy between the characters kept grating on me. On the one hand, there’s Joe, a normal human man. On the other, there’s a 7-foot tall not-exactly-all-powerful-but-might-as-well-be creature of twice his weight. Ready, willing, and able to pick Joe up, fling him around, completely dominate him physically.

I was a one-hundred-and-sixty-pound man in his prime being carted off by a randy suitor, like a helpless maiden in a Greek myth.


Once I started wondering how reading this was any different from reading m/f, the DNF was probably inevitable.

But! I loved the writing! The characters, major and minor, were distinctive and delightful; the soggy seaside setting was vividly evoked; and the humor struck me just right. I definitely consider Isabel Murray a keeper, and will be looking for another book to try. (At the moment she only has one other, and it’s described as “age-gap, opposites-attract,” so the trope gods are not smiling on me. Insert sad-trombone sound here.)

If you *do* enjoy reading about human/cryptid, human/alien, or human/monster pairings, I encourage you to give this a look. At least read the blurb, and see if it grabs your fancy.
Profile Image for Rosabel.
688 reviews154 followers
July 7, 2022
Isabel Murray is an author that I enjoy, her humor is so dark and sarcastic that I adore it. 🤭🤭 But this book was doomed from the beginning. 😮‍💨

This story was based in a trope we all hate: miss communication!! The mermaid didn't speak English and the human didn't speak merman. 😮‍💨😮‍💨

So while I enjoyed the beginning of this, it got boring really quickly. There were a lot of situations that didn't make sense, a lot of "cultural" differences that were never mended, there was a point where they simply needed to TALK!!!

But they didn't, so it became very repetitive and very about sex. Sex, not love, because how can you love someone if you don't know them? And how can you know them if you don't speak to them?

So I dnf at 87%, but it had it's funny moments":

“That’s an erection,” Jerry corrected me. “Probably rigor mortis.” Jessy talking to Joe about "the body"

"I’m honest with you, the whole thing freaked me the fuck out. I had me something of an existential crisis. I thought it over, though, and once I stopped getting the panic shits, I started to realize how cool the whole thing was.” Jerry again.

“Well, we’re only doing that because classification is pending. No tail says he ain’t a merman so what do you want to call him for now? Just pick one of the others as a working theory? Nix, kelpie? Merrow? Gill-man? Maybe-nix? Not-merman? Aquama—no. That’s trademarked. Aqualord. I like that.” Jerry 🤣

“Pretty dick, and a nice arse. Though if you recall, I did notice the arse first.” Jerry, heterosexual 68 years old dude, who loves his wife.

"It had been a long time since our inability to communicate verbally had even registered for me, let alone posed a problem.

Right now, it posed a big problem.

How was I supposed to tell Dave any of this?" This was at 87% 🤣🤣

My lord, but it was fun. 🤷🏻‍♀️
Profile Image for Debra.
1,976 reviews228 followers
December 9, 2021
4.25 stars

New-to-me author and boy did I enjoy this book! It had humor, romance, angst and a mysterious, sexy, sea creature that could be anything from a sea vampire to a merman (all is eventually revealed but it takes a while to get there).

Dave and Joe's story - with help from Joe's friend Jerry - has plenty of ups and downs. There is a huge problem in that they really cannot communicate with each other in the traditional manner. It's clear from the start that Dave wants Joe, and that he's possessive of him, but that's about all that is clear to Joe as Dave sets about courting him, but lust and love find a way of course.

The story is told strictly from Joe's POV and I would have bumped the rating up if we had gotten an Epilogue or a chapter or a scene from Dave's POV. By the end of the story we do get to know Dave, but he is as mysterious to us as he is to Joe in some regards.

This story was unexpected in a good way and I'll definitely be checking out the next book this author writes.
Profile Image for Cadiva.
3,255 reviews295 followers
May 18, 2022
A unique romance with a distinct English flavour

I'm not sure quite how to review this book without giving away what makes the heart and soul of it so appealing.

It's not a pure paranormal romance, it has a feel of both a fairy tale and a bit of a mystery but I loved everything about it.

Joe and 'Dave' are such compelling characters and their relationship is filled with moments that range between joyous, heart-breaking and just plain confusing.

Jerry, who starts off as an acquaintance but comes to be Joe's best friend, provides both the comic relief and a voice of support and reason.

Like the ebb and flow of the tides, the relationship between Joe and Dave switches between a passionate and erotically fueled one and a longing pining potentially destructive one.

Throughout it all, the narrative explores how two hearts can become entwined even when the origins of one half of the pair are mysterious and when communication can't take place other than in the simplest of ways.

One thing, imho, that is solid beyond anything else, is the strength of the love between them and the only thing I'd have wished for would be an Epilogue a few years down the road to see how they were doing.
Profile Image for Aldi.
1,086 reviews85 followers
November 8, 2021
This is a tricky one to rate; going with 2.5 rounded up. I love a merfolk story so this was very much up my alley, and the voice was delightful – snarky, distinctive, and genuinely funny without sounding like the author was trying too hard. It was just really fun to read.

Up until about the 60% mark, when I abruptly and totally lost interest and abandoned the book for days. I did finish eventually and it wasn’t a chore by any means, but the initial shine was gone for me once it became clear that basically, this plot was never really going to evolve and the main pairing’s practical merman/human compatibility hurdles were never going to be overcome.

It boils down to the fact that they were never going to be able to actually communicate, beyond, you know, soulmate bond, telepathy-adjacent emotional connection, epic sex, blah blah. That’s… not enough. I never doubted that they loved each other, in fact the author did a great job with the depths of their feelings (and the emotional devastation of their separations), but to me the idea of loving a person you can’t ever talk to, that you can’t exchange ideas and thoughts and problems and random daily observations with, isn’t romantic, it’s really fucking sad. It’s interesting because it made me think (harder than the book probably merits, lol) about what love means to me and how much I consider knowing a person to be an essential part of love. I guess that’s why soulmate-type stories (and the bonded mate stuff that a lot of shifter romances employ) don’t usually work for me. I want the characters to choose each other not because of some biological imperative but because of who the other person is, and to do that, you have to, well, know who the other person is.

That didn’t happen here. It can’t happen, apparently, because for whatever reason two otherwise perfectly compatible intelligent humanoids can’t work out a communication system that goes beyond super-basic gesturing? That didn’t necessarily make sense anyway, but what it ended up meaning was that Joe knows absolutely nothing about Dave-the-randomly-named-merman and, ultimately, because Joe is the narrator and we know what he knows, we don’t know zilch about Dave either. Apart from “he’s beautiful, super-possessive, acts like a dog a lot, lives in the sea, loves Joe,” that is. Joe learns nothing about merfolk culture. He never even learns Dave’s real name. They’re going to spend the rest of their relationship being temporary visitors in the other person’s world that they’re making zero effort to comprehend. And because all Joe ever thinks about is his communication-challenged merman romance and all the (many, many) attendant problems, we ultimately don’t know that much about him as a person either. (Didn’t help that both Joe, who’s pushing 40, and his BFF Jerry who’s meant to be in his sixties, talk and act like a pair of spazzy teenagers at all times.) It just made the whole story ring a little hollow, because essentially, it never goes very far beyond the quirky “boy meets merman” set-up.

There was some other stuff, like the appalling frequency with which Dave almost accidentally killed either Joe or Jerry due to not understanding how humans work, and the appalling ease with which those instances were dismissed (“soooo my merman bf tried to kill my BFF again bc he thought we were boning, LOL, nbd” basically), that made me feel kind of iffy about the whole thing as well.

But all that said, the style was still highly entertaining and I do want to check out some of this author’s other work.

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Kit (Metaphors and Moonlight).
866 reviews120 followers
February 23, 2022
4 Stars

Review:
This was so funny, the romance was surprisingly believable given the weird situation, and the characters were fun, including (or especially) the inhuman merman!

Honestly, a big part of why this worked for me was that Joe was demisexual. I'd just had a string of bad luck with m/m romance books in which characters were immediately thinking about or having sex upon meeting, and that became the sole focus of the relationship, which generally isn't my thing. But Joe wasn't immediately thinking about wanting to have sex with the scary, horny merman, the romance and sex took a bit of time, and that made a big difference for me in being able to understand, feel, and believe the feelings between them.

And the romance was surprisingly believable, given the weird premise. It was such a weird situation, these two couldn't even communicate properly (it went beyond just a language barrier, since it wasn't like they could use translators even), but I don't know, it just worked. Sometimes feelings are just like that, they happen regardless of logic, and the author captured that and made me believe it, which is something not every author or book is able to do for me.

I loved how inhuman Dave (the merman) was. Sure, he looked mostly human, but he was very much not. He didn't speak, except to mimic some of the things Joe said most often, although he sometimes didn't know what they meant. He didn't understand human customs or technology. He had his own customs, like wooing Joe by bringing him dead sea creatures as gifts. He never quite understood the friendship between Joe and Jerry. He didn't fully understand human physiology, which touched upon the idea that maybe merfolk have the bad rap they do because they want to be close to humans but end up killing them by accident. It was a great portrayal of a non-human character that was humorous while still being believable rather than over the top.

Speaking of humorous, this book was so funny! Jerry was especially hilarious. He was the most unrealistic thing, but he gets a pass because he made me laugh.

There was also emotion and angst and longing. Their path to romance wasn't the smoothest. I felt for them. It's a bit of an atypical romance, almost kind of bittersweet. *SPOILER* *END SPOILER*

Overall, this was funny and great with unexpected demisexual rep, an inhuman merman, a bit of angst and longing, and a surprisingly believable and touching romance that I really enjoyed!

*Rating: 4 Stars // Read Date: 2022 // Format: Ebook via TTS*

Recommended For:
Anyone who likes m/m romance, humor, inhuman mermen, demisexual rep, some angst/longing, and unique sort of romance.

Original Review @ Metaphors and Moonlight
Profile Image for Denise.
701 reviews135 followers
June 24, 2022
2 Stars

I don't know what to think of this, honestly. It had an interesting premise and I did like the characters, but the story dragged and was repetitive. It's difficult to build a believable relationship when the MCs cannot communicate due to a language barrier and they just bang constantly. The ending was also pretty lackluster and lacked closure - it seemed like their future was that they would .
Profile Image for Rin Pet.
500 reviews29 followers
December 23, 2021
This book really isn’t an HEA.

And it pretty much repeats the same scene over and over and over throughout the entire book. And that’s it. There is no conclusion. What’s happening in the beginning, is exactly what is happening in the end. There is no story progression. There is kind of an evolution of their “relationship” but not much because they never learned to communicate.

I was excited by the plot and the humor was fun, but it dragged and once I realized there was actually no real conclusion to the story, I was reeeally disappointed.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for the kevin.
940 reviews104 followers
January 29, 2022
DNF at 19%

First: if you like Alice Winter's style of humor, this may be for you.

I do not.

The humor I found cringy, the excessive meandering analogies I found tedious, and the plot...well, it wasn't really happening for me.

The "no sense of personal boundaries" in fact means dubcon, but pretending it's cute. Gotta call a spade a spade, you know?

Very over the top, instalove/lust despite them not being able to talk, and the writing was choppy with short, abrupt paragraphs.

Overall, no thanks.
Profile Image for Miriah.
620 reviews18 followers
June 7, 2022
4.5 star. This was INSANELY fun. Like just an absolute blast to read. There was never a dull moment and the writing is fucking funny. I didn’t initially want to read this story due to something I read in another review about how the main couple becomes separated (for very understandable reasons) but after I read (and loved) Not That Complicated, I needed to read more by this author.

Joe is an awesome voice to read from. He’s funny and feels very real. His emotions make sense and I loved his thoughts. I loved him. His friend Jerry is the icing on top of the Joe and Dave cake, being absolutely hilarious, incredibly supportive, and perhaps a bit bicurious. Dave is a dick but in an absolutely hilarious way. He is into Joe and he is not giving up on him and watching him court Joe is amazing.

Even more amazing is later on, when Joe courts Dave back.

For the angsty parts when Joe and Dave are separated, the special bond they have makes things feel a bit less severe.

I didn’t get the normal “ahhh” contentment from reading about two people falling in love, but I wouldn’t expect that from a love story between a human and an alienish merman who will never speak the same language. I did really appreciate Dave’s understanding of consent, though.

I would really recommend this to anyone who enjoys “monster” romance where the monster character has a huge dick and recognizes the human as his from first sight. I just wish there had been an epilogue!
Profile Image for Sari.
30 reviews2 followers
February 13, 2023
On learning to connect, communicate and compromise.

🧜‍♂️ *sobs audibly in merman* 🧜‍♂️
Profile Image for Shelba.
1,890 reviews35 followers
May 16, 2022
Gah, I loved this. I hate that it’s done and even worse that as it currently stands, I’ve now read everything of what has quickly become a favourite author. Now we play the waiting game til the next release
May 19, 2022
I have to admit I'm pleasantly surprised. Honestly, I started this book not expecting much, and it is ridiculous and kind of weird but at the same time it's so genuine. It's a lovely funny strange as hell romance that somehow works, and I'm really glad I gave this book a chance.
Profile Image for Adam.
256 reviews41 followers
November 3, 2021
4.5 rounded up.

So when I first saw this book pop up on my Goodreads page, I thought, "Nah, I'll pass." I have very little interest in cross-species romances, I thought. I'm cool with werewolves, vampires, and so on, as long as they are at least human-shaped. Especially during sex scenes. Ugh.

But the cover of Catch and Release is really, really appealing. And the synopsis? Right up my alley. So I gave it a read.

This is really good, you guys. To start, a summary: Joe encounters a merman- siren- kelpie- being who starts to court him. But when one of you lives on land and the other in the sea, forming a relationship is not easy. This is one of the things that makes this book so good; there is an actual reason behind the difficulty in establishing a relationship, not just "oh my god I can't possibly enter a relationship for I am far too worthless/messed up/taken/insert-dumb-excuse here."

My only criticism is related to communication, which is a common complaint I have for most romances. . But hell, at least the miscommunications in this book have a solid basis!

Overall, this is a well-written, unique, and fun book. I'm looking forward to more releases by this author.
Profile Image for Rachel Emily.
3,991 reviews263 followers
December 5, 2021
OMG I loved this book.

It kinda gave me an Alice Winters-esque feel when it comes to the humor and the sass, and I LOVED Dave the merman.

Lots to laugh about, some lovely steam and size kink, and a lot of feels towards the end. I really love the voice to Joe telling the story. We never get a POV from Dave the merman, we truly do learn all we can about a merman who can't speak English, through the narrator's eyes. And Joe's friend Jerry is pretty awesome and hilarious.

Yes things at the beginning feel a bit OTT, but keep reading and it settles into this lovely story about a merman wooing a human, and then a human having to figure out wooing back.

ALSO! Shout out for demi rep with Joe! I love how he thinks of his past relationships and flat out owns his demisexuality. Loved that.

Also
Profile Image for Mello.
73 reviews3 followers
February 18, 2023
3.3 ⭐

I haven't laughed so hard in a long time. Oh my goodness 😂. I can't tell that I don't like it. Some parts were really good, but I couldn't connect with the story. I needed more information about certain things, and I felt like the end was lacking something.
Profile Image for ELK.
271 reviews
August 21, 2022
4.25/5 stars.
A new favorite supernatural-mm. I might have to check other works by this author now.
Just what I wanted to read at the moment, managed to deliver in the escape department.
This was such a fun read! Super hilarious but also sweet and cozy. I'm not sure it's categorized as humor, but I just bursted up laughing at random intervals, I must have looked like an idiot. But I couldn't stop grinning at how cute and stupidly in love these two were.
I was sucked in right from the start, I was totally hoked (get it?) and couldn't get enough of the two.

The cozy relaxing atmosphere of this little fishing village also spoke to me. My mind is made up now, that's how I want to spend my time (with maybe less fishing and sea life, not a fan of that).
Even Jerry grew on me by the midway point.
The demisexuality rep is always welcome and appreciated.
The biting scene was a bit weird, and the writing style of the sex scenes was different than what I usually encounter in the genre, but it all very much suited this charming book.

I've read a review, saying that the second part wasn't as good as the first, and going as far as encouraging others to not continue past that point. But I personally did enjoy all of it, and can't think of a better ending.

I just hope Joe and Dave (both names seem a bit odd-fitting for the characters) live happily ever after. Also, Joe, look after yourself, don't forget to eat and live properly during the winter.

Highly recommended for fans of the genre!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Courtney Bassett.
685 reviews144 followers
December 9, 2021
Both funny and bittersweet

This was highly recommended to me and I adored it! At one point I giggled so much I woke my poor husband. The cultural differences and language barrier lead to some pretty hilarious moments, but are also the reason I found it bittersweet at times, because there are some differences that make it have an unusual version of a happy ending. It WAS happy, though.
Profile Image for Corinne.
134 reviews
November 27, 2022
A weird and funny delight. (You can't take it too seriously but it was also surprisingly sweet and tender at times too.) The best example of reading the right book at the right time for me.
Profile Image for BWT.
2,147 reviews215 followers
July 25, 2022
Funny and hot.

I really enjoy Isabel Murray's writing and humor, which is very much right up my alley. 'Catch and Release' is a paranormal romance featuring a merman 🧜🏽‍♂️ who falls in love with a 😉fisherman. I enjoyed the story overall, but wish it had maybe a chapter or two more to really round everything off in a neater bow.
Profile Image for erraticdemon.
104 reviews28 followers
December 27, 2022
Review to come!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Madison.
89 reviews6 followers
May 29, 2022
So when I finished the book, it was a 5/5 for me. I loved it. I absolutely love the author's writing and they're definitely going to be an author that I keep my eye on. But after time it dropped to a generous 4/5.

Normally I don't like instalove, but in the case of a merman? I'll let it pass since there's a whole different culture/species going on. Jerry was a fun character, even though he definitely didn't feel like a 50-whatever year old man.

The scene where Joe was trying to determine what creature Dave was? Which leads me the major issue I had...

Communication.

Overall I still really enjoyed the book. The world building around the merman was interesting, if mainly because of Joe's thoughts and guesses about how it all works.
Profile Image for Heather.
585 reviews8 followers
February 9, 2022
The book held me until about 40% and then it lost me, catch and release indeed. I thought the story was charming up to that point, but I was low-key frustrated that the characters weren't fleshed out beyond the basics and never really developed any more than that. At the 40% mark the narrator inexplicably decided he was in love with the other MC, and it was so jarring and illogical that I was like, "......What?" There was legit nothing for him to fall in love with besides physical characteristics, and since he self-identified as demi, it just really, really made absolutely no sense to me. I skimmed the rest of the book and there was just never anything there to make me revise my opinion on the poor storytelling present in this book.
Profile Image for Natalie .
2,341 reviews32 followers
March 6, 2022
Bit too long and repetitive for me. Also struggled with the language barrier between the two. It was sweet, possessive and a little creepy. Favourite character was Jerry and his death wish with Dave.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for BB.
198 reviews9 followers
September 27, 2021
Good, God. This book was beautiful. This book...

Jesus.

I went through an array of emotions with this book that only years of therapy, two bottles of wine, six boxes of pizza, and an entire factory of Dove chocolate will help me recover from.

I laughed, I cried, I got angry, my heart broke, my veins pulsed, my nether-regions did funny things, my kindle almost met a destructive death against any surface I was near. All in the single night it took me to devour this book.

I'd posted a request in a forum for possessive alpha male MC's and was suggested this gem. It did not disappoint. I and the hammocks (me and the hammocks? The hammocks and I? - I don't know) in this book can attest to that. (The hammock scenes were deliriously funny to me.)

Dave and Joe were EVERYTHING. From the second they met, with Jerry nearby to make the entire situation more hilarious, I was hooked. The constant catch and release theme gutted me and kept me going. Told entirely from Joe's POV, for a couple of obvious reasons, I FELT everything Joe did. The descriptions, the emotions, all of it given to you fantastically by Isabel Murray. You have gained a lifelong fan from this book, my friend. Like an - I will show up at your house (invited of course) and grocery shop for you and then clean your baseboards if you want me to - type of fan. I am devoted. I am in awe. I will worship at your feet (with your consent) gladly and happily if that's a thing you'd be into.

I wasn't entirely sure about it at first, it wasn't the first suggestion I picked up, but I was intrigued. I'd never read or cared to read, a book with a merman in it. Wasn't against it necessarily - I'll read most genres and tropes - but it wasn't something I was grabbing for either. I can say, Isabel Murray ruined me for all other merman books. Nothing will come close to this. Nothing will ever be as good as this book.

It wasn't all sunshine and rainbows. There's a fair amount of angst in the book. It flayed me alive at some points. I had to stop, not only because I couldn't read past the tears, but there were several moments where I had to put the kindle down and blow out the breath I didn't know I'd been holding. It was that intense.

But then, there were the soft moments. The moments where you got a glimpse into Joe and Dave's impossible connection. Into the light-hearted scenes with Jerry.

Of course, then there were the sexy times. The incredibly hot, sensual, sometimes funny, and complicated (I mean, really, the lube scene was MY FAVORITE!).

The way that Isabel Murray navigated their language barrier but never let up on it was nothing short of amazing. The intricate ways she wove through that tension, that angst, was as beautiful as it was frustrating. But the good kind of frustrating. The kind I love, as a reader.

Do I sound like I'm in love with her yet? Because I might be. Maybe. It's possible. Okay - I am. We're not talking about it though.

One of my favorite scenes was this one:

"'I ain't no homophobe,' Jerry said. 'I'm about twelve inches away from your boyfriend and his constant boner, and am I freaking out? No. In fact, I'm checking him out.'

'Jerry. Don't check him out.'"

'Why not? I'm secure in my masculinity. I know about things like heteroflexibility and stuff. That boner is enormous and I'm telling you right here and now ain't no part of me can stretch enough to take it, I don't care how you do it, but I could... I could touch it. Yeah, I could see me touching it. See what it's like.'

'Jesus, Jerry. Don't touch his dick, are you crazy? If he won't let you touch my octopus, I can all but guarantee he won't be happy if you go for his dick.'


When I tell you that I almost fell out of my chair laughing, I. Am. Not. Lying. I scared my dog, my cat parkoured off the wall to get away from me. My stomach hurt and tears fell freely down my cheeks. It was an entire production and it wasn't the only one.

READ IT!!!!!


Profile Image for Becky B.
1,380 reviews
June 3, 2022
"Catch and Release" received FOUR stars.

The plot moved slowly in the middle, but I absolutely adored this bittersweet love story. 💞

The novel gained *stars* for these items:

* gained for: "The book caught my interest in the first five pages."

* gained for: "I thought about the book when I was forced to set it down and re-enter society."

* gained for: "There were no info dumps, poor writing, or copy edit mistakes that jerked me out of the story."

* gained for: "I was sad when the book ended. I wanted more!"

The novel failed to gain stars for this item:

NO STAR gained for: "That's it. I'm hooked on this author. I will automatically try anything she/he/they writes."
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