When London Snow Falls
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- $3.99
Publisher Description
Charlie Renfrew is too busy and too broke for a love life. There’s no room in a schedule crammed with university, a full-time job, music, and his very committed relationship with overthinking. Hence the dating ban. Which is exactly when Ben Campbell shows up with his piercings, quirky knits, and indie rock fame. But maybe it’s time for Charlie to trade caffeine for something hotter, blonder, and completely out of his comfort zone.
Gorgeous, funny men don’t happen to Charlie. Not like this. Even if it’s ill-timed and too bloody complicated. But maybe a quick shag won’t hurt…
Sex might be easy, but being vulnerable isn’t. Not for Charlie, his anxiety, or his precarious stack of responsibilities. It would be so easy to fall into Ben’s world of cozy, snowy London where there’s love and sex and possibilities. But Charlie already knows what happens when he goes off course. Not to mention the consequences. And when the snow melts, he’ll have to put his heart back into a deep freeze…
Each book in the When Snow Falls series is STANDALONE:
* An Unexpected Kind of Love
* When London Snow Falls
Customer Reviews
Sweet and scary… at times.
I read a review of this book that wasn’t very positive, and I wondered if that reader had read the same story I was reading. Charlie and Ben brought happiness and fears to my reading. They are two people who belonged together from the first encounter, even though Charlie’s insecurities threatened to upend their relationship at several corners. I had so much respect for Charlie’s goals and efforts, and I thought Ben was one of the most thoughtful and kind men I’ve ever met in novels. As I write this review to urge you to read “When London Snow Falls,” I am only sad that the story has ended… at least as the novel concluded. I don’t think these guys will leave my imagination for some time. I’m happy, and I would expect you will be, too, if you read this book .
Oh Poor Me
It’s a hard to get into read. Written in the first person, all the main character does is complain about how hard his life is, without embodying the agency to resolve his problems. He comes off as whiny, and very “woe is me.”
It’s not an optimistic read.