Scan barcode
A review by dinohakari
A Home in You by Courtney W. Dixon
4.0
I have read several books by this author and something that characterizes her is that certain sweetness that she gives to the characters despite the traumas or difficult situations that most of them have gone through. And what greater sweetness than two teenagers discovering love for the first time?
This is what happens in this story, but with some added details. It is never easy to deal with feelings, and in adolescence everything seems exacerbated, everything is felt deeply. And Dillon and Cade not only deal with this, but with the fact of accepting their sexual identity, and the fact that they are stepbrothers, which causes them to hide their relationship. But that doesn't stop them from dreaming and planning their future. Until they are discovered and separated.
More than a year passes until they meet again, and during that time, both have suffered painfully that time apart, believing that the other had forgotten or given up. But now they are face to face, and despite the initial anger and resentment, soon what they really feel comes to light and together they begin to carry out what they had planned years ago, no longer as teenagers, but as young adults.
Despite the sweetness that I mentioned before, the pain they went through is palpable through the pages. But we can also feel the joy and the pleasure when they finally get together.
I was given an advanced copy and wrote a voluntarily review.
This is what happens in this story, but with some added details. It is never easy to deal with feelings, and in adolescence everything seems exacerbated, everything is felt deeply. And Dillon and Cade not only deal with this, but with the fact of accepting their sexual identity, and the fact that they are stepbrothers, which causes them to hide their relationship. But that doesn't stop them from dreaming and planning their future. Until they are discovered and separated.
More than a year passes until they meet again, and during that time, both have suffered painfully that time apart, believing that the other had forgotten or given up. But now they are face to face, and despite the initial anger and resentment, soon what they really feel comes to light and together they begin to carry out what they had planned years ago, no longer as teenagers, but as young adults.
Despite the sweetness that I mentioned before, the pain they went through is palpable through the pages. But we can also feel the joy and the pleasure when they finally get together.
I was given an advanced copy and wrote a voluntarily review.