Emotional and unusual MM hurt-comfort sports romance
A third solid hit for the Hit and Run series brings it home for the character voted most-hated/least likely to find love in the previous two books. An unusual and refreshing hurt-comfort romance with some steam and more warmth and kindness than might have been forecast. While the book can stand alone, I highly recommend reading the first two in the trilogy to get the full back story. All three books are excellent and unique, and romantic in different ways. Please read the sales copy for a plot summary.
Hervé. Need I say more? After the first two books, I was extremely curious to know how on earth E.M. Lindsey was going to turn this character I loved to hate into a hero. Well, never doubt this author’s ability to go beyond the surface and take on the hard stuff as they peel back layer after layer of life experience, pain, authentic different abilities, and the human instinct to seek connection.
Lindsey creates two fascinating characters going through distinct and different hurts, finding each other at their lowest points in life and literally, in one case, picking each other up off the ground and giving the other the strength they would never have asked for to keep going. It’s not a downer of a story though; the human instinct to find joy in the hard spots shines through, as pro-ball player Orion takes time away to come to terms with confusion and grief and disgraced celebrity Hervé works through the most humbling of physical conditions while trying to figure out who he wants to be going forward. Their unexpected random meeting and realized mutual connections might have driven them apart before they even got started, but with each in a place of understanding that life is short and not to dismiss an unexpected open door, a sweetly gentle and rather steamy romance begins.
I appreciated that there was no excusing Hervé’s past behavior, and no one tried. The story was in part about taking responsibility for your past and taking responsibility for your future, not using old mistakes as excuses to continue bad behavior. And most moving was the message that, while you can apologize and hope for forgiveness, you are never owed it from anyone, and you must move forward without any expectation of it. In fact one of my favorite things here is that no one does forgive Hervé, and he must let go and move forward for himself. I liked him all the better for understanding that, and Orion for getting to know him as he is now, even knowing that the man he’s coming to know and love might never be accepted or trusted by his closest friends. Because Orion is a grownup and communicates about the situation, I was able to believe this relationship had every chance of success.
It’s not a perfect book—for one, it seemed contrived that they both wound up in the same small town in France with no explanation (unless I missed it?), and I would have loved another scene or two to cement the friendship and growing feelings between the two men before they were declaring deeper feelings and making grand gestures—but as emotion became palpable on page and the two continued to treat each other with respect and unconditional acceptance, I believed that despite not having much time together, eventually they would absolutely make it together and felt like a terrific match.
Previous characters added strong conflict and obstacles to a hard-fought, hard-won, well-deserved ending.
HEA, hurt-comfort, sports (baseball), no cheating or emotional cheating, strong communication and beautifully rendered emotion. Recommended. Read the trilogy!