Couple things: This book is about cheating. MC1 just divorced his wife who was cheating on him, and MC2 cheats on his wife (spontaneously, not planned, because they have a bad marriage) with MC1. Given how much romance readers viscerally dislike cheating, I feel like that should have been in the blurb. I thought this might be interesting to pursue, how they can reconcile this situation, but then the author made all the women a terrible people (except maybe MC1's sisters, who are super maternal and protective, natch). MC1's ex is a neglectful b*tch and terrible, unnatural mother. MC1's brother's ex is a neglectful b*tch and terrible, unnatural mother. (These guys are the best dads ever, obviously, and their father who was a single dad (widower) is also the best dad ever.) AND MC2's wife is set up to be unreasonable, unlikeable, and not meeting his needs (he's touch starved, which leads to the cheating kiss in the beginning). And I just didn't think I needed that kind of misogyny in my reading.