Rabu, 15 Januari 2020

Download Mobi Finley (Sunset Cove Series Book 1) By Ella Frank

Download Mobi Finley (Sunset Cove Series Book 1) By Ella Frank

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Finley (Sunset Cove Series Book 1)-Ella Frank

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Ebook About
It's time to come home, Finn.It’s been seven years since Daniel Finley left his hometown in Florida for the hustle and bustle of Chicago’s city life.Since then, he’s worked hard for his position at the prestigious law firm Leighton & Associates, even when it’s caused distance and isolation from his family and friends. But that’s all about to change.On his thirtieth birthday, he receives the one thing he never dared hope for. Something that was promised to him years earlier—a note. One simple sentence from the man he’s never been able to forget.Six words will forever change the course of their lives.Brantley Hayes has it all. Or so he thinks. When he first made the decision to take a job down in Florida, his family thought he was crazy. But, after years of living in the quiet beach town, he finally feels a sense of community. He’s surrounded himself with friends who are like family, has a job he loves, and owns a spectacular beachfront property that is his sanctuary.Yet he still feels unfulfilled, as if a piece of the puzzle is missing, and he knows exactly which piece it is. On an impulse, he follows through with a promise he made years earlier. A promise to call home the one he sent away.Nothing is as simple as it seems.After years of separation, the former lovers are reunited, but Brantley wasn’t expecting to encounter the high walls now guarding Daniel’s heart. Daniel may not be the same person he was when he left, but he knows that the first step to healing is the note in his hand.

Book Finley (Sunset Cove Series Book 1) Review :



My biggest feeling after reading Finley is disappointment. Ella Frank can do so much better. Try and Take were two of the best romance books I've read. Trust was not as good but it still had Logan and Tate and was definitely worth reading. Finley seems like it was written by a different author.I am not that hard to get to suspend belief. After all, I believed a 27 year old man who had been married could not know that he was bisexual until he met Logan in Try. There were lots of other things in the Temptation series that required some suspension of belief and I happily went there. But Finley was too much. You need to believe that Daniel would leave his lover, family, and friends and not come back for 7 years. That after a 3 year relationship he would just leave with no more contact when Brantley told him to go. That when he did come back his mom, sister, and best friend would be OK with him abandoning them after 2 nights to go stay with his ex. That someone like Brantley would have started a relationship with a student. That they would delay starting their sexual relationship back up for things like cheese, grapes, and a nap. In the Temptation series Frank was a master at creating delicious delayed gratification. In Finley it just feels like stretching and filling. The overlong flashbacks do very little to enhance the book, either. Again, a lot of those scenes could have be a sentence or two.Very little actually happens in the book. The secondary characters are barely there. I can't list everything that was disappointing without spoilers, but there isn't even that much to spoil.My biggest problem, though, was the sloppy way 'he' and 'him' was used throughout the book. Bad writing and bad editing. I often had trouble figuring out who was talking/thinking. I read a lot of m/m and I don't think I have ever had this much trouble figuring out which character the author was referring to. At least one sentence had 3 he's in it, and they weren't all the same he. That is just laziness.If this book was written by someone else I would not have thought much about it. However, I considered Ella Frank an auto-buy. I really feel like she phoned this one in or rushed it. Maybe after she wrote Trust and didn't get much blow-back about it being substandard she feels she doesn't have to work so hard. I don't know. I do know she is not an auto-buy anymore.
Finley is the first novel I've read by Ella Frank. Despite coming highly recommended to me by our very own Kim, I had a lot of trouble getting into this story; in fact, I almost gave up on it multiple times in the first half of the book. I'm glad I persevered, though, because it turned out to be a solid and very enjoyable read.I suppose the best classification for the story line in Finley is second-chance love. Daniel "Finn" Finley, a highly successful lawyer on the verge of making partner at a Chicago law firm, returns to his Florida hometown for a two-week vacation after receiving a "come home" note from his former professor and lover of three-plus years, Brantley Hayes, seven years after the professor forced Finn out of his life with an action that, though made in Finn's best interest, resulted in heartbreak that did not heal in all those years. Finn's anger falls away a few days after his return when they fall back into love just as deeply as they had all that time ago, but it's a love destined for another heartbreak, as Finn cannot give up his new life and career to move back permanently, nor can he ask Brantley to leave all that he has in Florida.My problem with the book, as I hinted at earlier, is that I really struggled to get into the story during the first half of the book. Part of this was my impression of the characters themselves. During the first half, Finn comes across as a total d-bag. That in itself isn't a problem, but he manifests his harbored anger from the split with the less-than-brilliant idea that if he spends the two weeks screwing Brantley's brains out, then maybe he can finally get over him. Really? I would think a highly successful lawyer would have been able to logic his way through the idiocy of that little proposition even without a bowl of Honey Nut Cheerios at the start of the day. Meanwhile, Brantley seems little more than a weak-kneed pile of wishy-washy mush at the return of the now-even-hotter Finn instead of a man Finn would have looked up to so much in college.I'm not entirely certain, though, that I would have paid close attention to these character problems if I hadn't been pulled out of the story so often by the writing style in the first half of the book. Two things caused this. First, it suffers from an issue that every writer of MM (or FF, or even ménage) must be very wary of: the potential for ambiguity caused by excessive pronoun use. It's almost inevitable in such a book to run across at least one sentence or paragraph that has to be reread in order to figure out which "he" did what to which "him" with which of the "his"es what entangled in the other "his" what-have-you. Such is the nature of the beast. But it's beyond distracting when I have to do it as often as I did in the first half of the book. And second, instead of giving the back story of before Finn's leaving Florida in a tidy lump at the start of the book, the author chooses to give frequent memories in the form of multiple-page flashbacks scattered throughout the book, primarily to illustrate the change in the power dynamic of Finn and Brantley's relationship before and after the split. I don't mind the sparing use of flashbacks as a writing device, but here their overuse felt heavy handed and overly formulaic: here's a flashback of some event (like their first kiss), and now here's the event from now of their second first kiss (see how it compares?); now we're remembering the time when he said such-and-such, and back to the present, the words are spoken again, this time by the other one. Blah! Seriously? I'm not an idiot, so you don't have to pound it in with a bat to make the connection obvious. Just tell me the story, and if I can't make the connections, then that's my problem.Okay, yes, I'm done ranting now. Remember I said that I persevered? After the halfway mark, things improve drastically on all the issues I had prior to that point. Once I got there, it was full speed ahead, and I finished the book in that sitting. It's really too bad it took so long for me to feel the passion and love between these two because, really, they are interesting characters, the story is compelling with an appropriate amount of angst as befitting the situation, and the attraction and chemistry between Finn and Brantley is the sort of thing we all wish we could have.I know this author wrote a trilogy of MM books prior to this one. I wish I had read those first because there was an interaction toward the end of the book between Finn and the main characters from that trilogy that, at least temporarily, reverted my view of Finn back toward how I felt in the first half of the book. I know this sort of scene is a common hat-tip to loyal readers so I'm not docking for it, but even so, I wish the scene here had had a real point instead of just being throw-away to the Finn/Brantley plot.So all things considered, yes, I really liked Finley. I wanted to love it -- really I did. I just didn't get there. Hopefully I'll be better prepared for the next one in the story line.

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Download Mobi Finley (Sunset Cove Series Book 1) By Ella Frank Rating: 4.5 Diposkan Oleh: zandermal

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