


Sidney Bell's Woodbury Boys trilogy is about three young men who know one another because they spent time in the same "youth home." They all have trauma of one kind or another but the last in the series is the most painful. I just listened to the audiobook and in spite of that plot the love story is really sweet.) Still Alive by Jess Whitecroft features plenty of trauma, though the extent of it isn't revealed until quite late in the book.ĭriftwood by Harper Fox one of the MCs has trauma from serving as a doctor in Afghanistan and drinks too much the other is a maritime search-and-rescue officer with an abusive, controlling boyfriend. The MCs are together at the end, but there aren't the usual romance-novel beats on the way. Cook's Sixteen Songs About Regret is basically trauma and self-harm from start to finish (please check the description). Subreddit Schedule & Eventsĭetails on past, current, and upcoming special events, author AMAs, and monthly reading challenges are listed in the schedule section of the subreddit wiki. Or try this link to use Google to search the subreddit. Find a Bookįind all-time favorites and popular recommendations on our subreddit resources page and check out our New Reader guide. No complaints about author identities or over-generalizing about author or reader gendersįor more detail on the rules, please click here.įor our guidelines on how to write a book request that follows the rules, please click here. Mark your spoilers and warn us about books without a HEA/HFN No discrimination, bigotry, or microaggressions towards marginalized groups Requests must be text posts and post titles must be specificīook requests must be specific and follow our guidelines

A place to discuss M/M romance books, including book requests, reviews and recommendations, non-book media, and general discussions of the genre.
