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A review by kathyq10
The Secret Lives of Country Gentlemen by KJ Charles
adventurous
emotional
funny
hopeful
mysterious
reflective
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.0
Healthy communication, 3/5 spicy, lovely character development, and a sweet love story?? Hell yes. Will be reading this again as a comfort book in the future. Not particularly deep or groundbreaking prose / writing style, but the story and the characters are excellent! The mystery and how the MCs deal with both that and their relationship is engaging to follow. The romance genuinely made me feel things and played out in a heartwarming way (if a little fast-paced but whatever I’m here for it). Chemistry between the MCs was swoony and they had really fun banter when they were still figuring each other out. I would have liked one or two more chapters immediately after the mystery comes to a head to wind down the story but I liked it all the same.
The character development and self-healing that the MCs went through was the best part of the book for me, especially with how it tied into their romance. I love love to see romance where the MCs are generous and empathetic with one another, wear their hearts on their sleeves, and grow both individually and as a couple bc they actually LISTEN to each other. I really dislike the miscommunication trope and the typical third-act breakup paired with an overly quick and simplistic resolution, so this book delivered by complicating and elevating the relationship development. I also have a feeling the author has done some therapy or something bc the inner-child work, self-reflection, and “I want to be better for my romantic partner but most of all for MYSELF” vibes were prominent and drew me even more into the story and characters. There are little Easter eggs for the CBT girlies and I ate them up.
Last but far from least: the BADASS SIDE CHARACTERS round out the story very well, bringing humor and depth (specific shoutouts to fabulous queer allies Sophy, Asa, and Catherine). This book scratched my hyper-specific spicy-gay-regency-romance itch, and I finished it wanting to spend more time with ALL the characters.
Tropes: MLM; lovers to enemies to lovers; second chance romance; opposites attract; nobility x working class / class divide romance; “touch him and you die”; nerd x jock (but the 1810 version); found family; better together; HEA :)
On the language used in the s3x scenes: yes, the author uses the words “prick” and “stand” which are ridiculous but I assume what people said in that time period? I didn’t mind it bc the steamy scenes are otherwise well done with both their heat and intimacy, but I know some people get the immediate ick.
The character development and self-healing that the MCs went through was the best part of the book for me, especially with how it tied into their romance. I love love to see romance where the MCs are generous and empathetic with one another, wear their hearts on their sleeves, and grow both individually and as a couple bc they actually LISTEN to each other. I really dislike the miscommunication trope and the typical third-act breakup paired with an overly quick and simplistic resolution, so this book delivered by complicating and elevating the relationship development. I also have a feeling the author has done some therapy or something bc the inner-child work, self-reflection, and “I want to be better for my romantic partner but most of all for MYSELF” vibes were prominent and drew me even more into the story and characters. There are little Easter eggs for the CBT girlies and I ate them up.
Last but far from least: the BADASS SIDE CHARACTERS round out the story very well, bringing humor and depth (specific shoutouts to fabulous queer allies Sophy, Asa, and Catherine). This book scratched my hyper-specific spicy-gay-regency-romance itch, and I finished it wanting to spend more time with ALL the characters.
Tropes:
On the language used in the s3x scenes:
Graphic: Child abuse, Physical abuse, and Sexual content
Moderate: Bullying, Cursing, Death, Violence, Blood, Kidnapping, Grief, Death of parent, Murder, and Abandonment
Minor: Alcoholism, Racism, and Classism