Reviewed by: BigAl
Genre: Literary Fiction
Approximate word count: 70-75,000 words
Availability
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Author:
The author
of five other novels, Laurie Boris is a freelance writer, editor, and
proofreader as well as a regular contributor to Indies Unlimited. Her book Sliding Past Vertical was the winner in
the Contemporary Fiction category of BigAl’s Books and Pals 2014 Readers’
Choice Awards. Laurie lives with her husband in upstate New York.
For more,
visit Laurie’s website.
Description:
“With a few
humble words, mayoral staffer Joshua Goldberg comes out to the New York press,
resigns his post, and leaves his wife. Three months later, he is still skittish
about making his relationship with television producer Charlie Trager public.
Charlie
understands Joshua’s stress over the divorce and his desire to step back into
the political spotlight. But he’s tired of schedule conflicts and frustrated
about getting put on the back burner while the pressure ravages the man he
loves. Managing some of the most demanding divas in network television has
taught Charlie patience. But his cool facade is wearing thin.
Longing to
ease Joshua’s anguish and burning for control in a situation that seems headed
off the rails, Charlie takes a huge risk that could destroy everything he and
Joshua have worked so hard to build.”
Appraisal:
I was
confused when I saw this book was being billed as the third book in the
author’s “Trager Family Secrets” series. I knew it was the same characters and
was essentially a sequel to The Picture
of Cool, which is billed as book one. Had I missed one of Boris’ books?
With a little investigation I found that Don’t
Tell Anyone, which came out first, is sequenced as second in the series. Somehow
I’d never registered that Charlie, star of book one and three, was the gay
brother-in-law of Liza, the protagonist in book two. Not even when Liza and her
husband made appearances in the other two books. I guess we all have airhead
moments.
It is clear
that the character of Charlie had a lot more story for Boris to tell. What
surprises me (although it really shouldn’t) is despite the many surface
differences between Charlie and me (he’s gay, lives in a big city, is a
“creative type,” and much more social), I have no problem relating to his
experiences. That’s one of the things I’ve found, and keep getting reminded of,
when reading books with main characters whose life is much different than my
own. They remind me that the human experience is much the same for everyone,
with many of the same goals, frustrations, and struggles to find the balance
between our own needs and those we care about.
FYI:
Some adult
language.
Although
part of a series, reading book two is not a prerequisite to understanding what
is happening in this book. However, while not an absolute requirement, I’d
advise reading The Picture of Cool
before this installment.
Format/Typo Issues:
Although my
review is based on a beta version of the book and I can’t judge the final
product in this area, that version had no significant editing or proofing
issues.
Rating: ***** Five Stars
6 comments:
I loved the first two books and can't wait to dig into this installment. Charlie is a wonderful character.
Thank you, BigAl & Pals!
It's a great story.
Great review, Laurie. I'm not surprised. I love your writing. Good luck with this one.
Terrific review. Can't wait to read them all.
Great review, BigAl. I can't wait to dig into this one. I love Laurie's characters...
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