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MANGA: Uchi no Wanko Choukyou Sakusen
Uchi no Wanko Choukyou Sakusen – Miwa
Yuki is a salaryman who loves men to his core, and Shibasaki is his junior who adores his master like Hachiko. The two, having just started dating, tried to have sex, but it ended in failure…. The reason: Shibasaki’s lower half wouldn’t get hard. “You’re the one who confessed to me, aren’t you? If you like me, why can’t you get an erection!?” Shibasaki tries every trick in the book to get an erection, but….
Our Dog Training Operation! is a workplace senpai/kohai romance featuring an experienced older uke and an earnest younger seme.
Puppy dog seme is my jam, and while Shibasaki wasn’t exaggeratedly puppy-like, his eagerness to please and glowing adoration of his cranky senpai was endearing. Meanwhile, Yuki appeared to merely go along with the flow just because he reluctantly found his kohai cute. Tried as he might be turned off by the younger man, again and again, Shibasaki’s cuteness sneaks up on him and sweeps him away.
The titular training was really nothing but Yuki’s attempt to get his lover hard. It didn’t occur to the dorks that Shibasaki might be ace or demi. But they are entertaining as a couple, and I wanted to know more about their backstories and their HEA. It’s a one-shot that I wish was a full volume.
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REVIEW: Buried Passions by Andrew Grey
Buried Passions – Andrew Grey
When Broadway actor Jonah receives word that his uncle has passed away and named him the heir to a property in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, Jonah’s plan is to settle the estate as quickly as possible and return to his life in New York City. Much to Jonah’s surprise, the inheritance includes the Ashford Cemetery—and its hunky groundskeeper, recent Bosnian immigrant Luka Pavelka.
Jonah soon discovers Luka is more than easy on the eyes. He sees into Jonah’s heart like no man ever before, and his job at the cemetery is all he has. If Jonah sells, Luka is left with nothing. Luka is there for Jonah when Jonah needs someone most, and there’s no denying the chemistry and connection between them. But Jonah has a successful career back in New York. Now he must decide if it’s still the life he wants….
Andrew Grey is an author I’ve seen around for some time and only read recently. I regretted not doing so earlier because I practically inhaled his series, Carlisle Cops and Bad To Be Good.
His stories are about down-on-their-luck fellows and do-gooding average joes who changed their world. His storylines are rooted in the everyday with kindness at their core. They have a certain simplicity that could be boring in the wrong hands, but he had a way of imbuing them with pathos and heart, as well as uplifting moments that I almost always end up glued to his books until the very end. They make me believe that humanity is innately good.
Buried Passions is another brilliant example of that. Jonah Hughes is a Broadway actor in between jobs who recently inherited an old house with a cemetery, along with the hunky groundskeeper, Luka Pavelka. Little did he expect how they would change his life.
Luka is a hardworking Bosnian immigrant who still can’t speak English fluently. Frequently overlooked and underestimated, he’s also burdened with bringing shame to his family for being gay. His broken English hides a sharp sense of humor and a keen eye for detail. He is a man who likes taking care of someone, and he found that in the kind-hearted New Yorker who is a bit overwhelmed by his inheritance. Luka’s a total sweetheart!
The theme is seeing another person as they are. The story portrayed it at its most heartwarming in every way Luka and Jonah interacts. There is mutual respect and admiration from the beginning, and affection that grew into a soul-deep connection in the few weeks they were together.
When Jonah’s friend said Luka looks at Jonah like he hung the moon, the rightness of it hit me hard in the kokoro! Because that is exactly how you look at someone who treats you the way Jonah changed the world for Luka.
Their romance vaguely reminded me of one of my all-time favorite movies, God’s Own Country. It’s how Luka taught Jonah about making love instead of just fucking. It mirrors how the Romanian worker taught the Yorkshire sheep farmer intimacy during sex.
The plot follows Jonah as he navigates the changes in his life and his blossoming relationship with Luka. It also tackles the age-old dilemma of career vs. love. Jonah had to choose whether to grab the coveted starring role he was offered in New York or stay in Carlisle, the cozy little Pennsylvanian town that already felt like home the short time he was there. I loved that this is set in the same town as Carlisle Cops.
Like the author’s other stories, Buried Passions is deeply moving and downright engrossing. My heart bled for Luka and soared at his reconnection with his family. I was charmed by the small town coziness and swept away by the swoony romance. Although, the ending might be tied too neatly, all in all, it’s a sweet little tale about following a dream or following the heart.
Rating:
4.5 Stars – perfection is only half a step awaySoundtrack: Noticed
Artist: Mutemath
Album: Mutemath
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If you like my content, please consider supporting me on Ko-fi or PayPal. Your donations will help keep this website going. Thank you so much!
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Soundtrack: Noticed by Mutemath
Soundtrack to Buried Passions by Andrew Grey
Noticed by Mutemath for a book about a Broadway star who saw the invisible man who looks at him like he hung the moon.
You and your ways capture what I’ve misplaced
In the perfect fashion; just watch my heart’s reaction
This point of view is nothing that I’m used to
But I won’t close my eyes, ’cause they’re onto you
And all this time it was staring me blind
I can’t believe I never noticed my heart beforeThe only time I ever noticed my heart
Is when I noticed you, yeah -
Careful when you open, it’s easy to be broken
In the strangest fashion you start a chain reaction
When you look my way, something’s pounding away
And I wonder if I ever felt this before
And all this time oblivious to what you made so obvious
I can’t believe I never noticed my heart beforeYou are reaching something that is beating
I can’t believe I never noticed my heart before
Over and again, racing out of my skin
I can’t believe I never noticed my heart beforeYou and your ways capture what I’ve misplaced
In the perfect fashion; just watch my heart’s reaction
This point of view is nothing that I’m used to
But I won’t close my eyes, ’cause they’re onto you
And all this time it was staring me blind
I can’t believe I never noticed my heart beforeThe only time I ever noticed my heart
Is when I noticed you, yeahYou are reaching something that is beating
I can’t believe I never noticed my heart before
Over and again, racing out of my skin
I can’t believe I never noticed my heart before -
MOVIE FEATURE: Riot
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NEW RELEASE: Terror by Crea Reitan
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NEW RELEASE BLITZ: Haint Off the Chain by J. Hali Steele (Giveaway)