Two of London's most notorious rakehells, Linus Radcliffe and Robert Anderson, are the best of friends. They share almost everything—clothes, servants, their homes, and even each other's bed on occasion. The one thing they don't lovers. For while Linus prefers men, Robert prefers women...except when it comes to Linus.
As another Season nears its end, Robert can't ignore his growing jealousy. He hates watching Linus disappear from balls to dally with other men. Women are lovely, but Linus rouses feelings he's never felt with another. Unwilling to share his gorgeous friend another night, Robert has a proposition for Linus.
A proposition Linus flatly refuses—but not for the reasons Robert thinks. Still, Robert won't take no for an answer. He sets out to prove a thing or two to his best friend—yet will learn something about the heart himself.
Ava March is a bestselling author of sexy, emotionally intense M/M historical erotic romances. She loves writing in the Regency time period, where proper decorum is of the utmost importance, but where anything can happen behind closed doors. With over fifteen works to her credit, her books have been finalists in the Rainbow Awards and More Than Magic contest, and deemed ‘must-haves’ for Historical M/M romance by RT Book Reviews readers. Visit her website at www.AvaMarch.com to find out more about her books or to sign-up for her newsletter.
Rouges is the third novella in this M/M historical three part series Brook Street. Quite steamy regency historicals with new love-couples in each book. (My reviews: )
Tender sweet... About two very good friends —sometimes steaming hot f@ckbuddies— who needs to solve things. Maybe was this one the less interesting and engaging of the three in the series. ~ Well, I enjoyed (the 3:19 hrs audiobook) and that's what matters.
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London, 1882 Two of London's most notorious rakes, Linus Radcliffe and Robert Anderson, are the best of friends. One is gay (always) and the other one straight (mostly..). Then suddenly Robert can't held back the growing jealousy when he see Linus flirting or disappearing to dally with "other" men night after night.
Robert and Linus are really two best friends who do everything together. They are neighbors and they more or less share household. They arrive and leave balls and dinners at the same time. They spend all their free time together because they like (love) to be together. To be true they can probably hardly live without each other.
Trust and believe in a 'forever'.. But life isn't maybe that simple and easy. Linus feels much more than only friendship and maybe dors Robert too. But will Robert really be satisfied with just Linus, a man, in his bed? Will he regret the chance for a future wife, an ordinary family-life, and his lust to bed women as well?
These two Rogues men has to solve this whole secret 'gay-thing', some important relationships stuff and what they deep down want and crave.
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The audiobook edition and the 'new' narrator I wasn't sure I liked the change of narrator for book #3. (~ Why the need to change?!? ~) I must admit I was a bit sulky (really disappointed..) in the start but after a while was actually also B. Townsend quite okay . The last half didn't I even notice some (imagined?) shortcomings I thought about in the start.
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It was enjoying to follow these characters. The story, and plot, was good enough and I like to be there at "Brook Street". Some smexy moments and a sweet end. ~ Nice to meet some of our friends from book #1 and #2 as well.
I LIKE - three nice audio-hours["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>
Cover: I like it Rating: NC-17 Steaminess: HOT! Thumbs Up: 5 Overall: I loved it. Characters: Well written Plot: Compelling, you are just rooting for things to all work out. Page Turner: Yes. Series Cont.? Yes Recommend: Yes Book Boyfriend: Rob
SUMMARY (50 words or less) Okay, after reading the first in the series, I simply gobbled it up. Love it and read straight through. I was like a cheerleader on the sideline rooting for Rob the whole way. It’s the kind of romance that you just sink into. It had it all, hot, steamy, compelling.
To see my full review and yummy pic, check out my blog post below.
“Exercising discretion is a small price to pay in the grand scheme of things.”
I liked the story of Robert Anderson & Linus Radcliffe, 28, better than the previous, Fortune Hunter. Rob and Linus have been best friends for eighteen years, since their childhood. Since then they have been sharing just about everything Countless hours, filled with quiet conversations, silent tears, muffled laughter and eventually poorly stifled moans of pleasure. being each other’s first lovers. When Rob wants “I have a proposition for you. I would like us to become exclusive lovers.” Linus has a hard time to come to terms that Rob has finally realised that he wants him and only him.
“I always returned to you. Always came back to you because you’re who I want to be with. I love you.”
Pressing even closer, he drank up Rob’s moan. The kiss was full of passion and need and love. So deep, so intense, it set Linus’s head spinning. This was what he wanted. Had always wanted. Rob and only Rob. The first man he’d ever loved. The only man he had ever loved. And now Rob was right and truly his.
The story is told from both Rob & Linus’s POV, with appearance from the other characters in the series confirming their relationship with their lovers.
Part of the Brook Street Series, while each book can be read as a stand-alone, reading in order is recommended:
4.5 stars. Very good historical m/m romance about two men who've been friends since childhood and occasional lovers since their teens. Both are notorious rakehells, although one prefers men and the other women. But the whole balance of their friendship is about to change... I got sniffly reading this one, too.
This was my least favorite of the series. Robert and Linnus were frustrating, especially Linnus. I understood his reservations but I felt that they could've solved a lot just by talking a bit. And, considering they were supposed life-long friends - closer than close - who had a penchant for talking things through with each other, I expected more from them. I don't mean to make it sound as if I didn't enjoy this book because I did. Did I get my HEA? Yes! So I'm content with that. I just wish this one was ... better.
Bottom line: my least favorite story but with such a WONDERFUL series, the competition was stiff.
Like its predecessors this book has a good concept but keeps a simplicity that prevents it from being anything other than an 'OK experience'. Anderson and Radcliffe have been fuck buddies for a decade. Both are notorious man-whores. But Anderson decides he wants to be exclusive with Radcliffe. A lot of non-conversation happens. They finally have a conversation and then HEA. Pretty simple plot. Yeah, I see now why this series was free on Audible Escapes.
My absolute favorite of the Brook Street books! I have a soft spot for a good friends-to-lovers story. Throw in two adorably stubborn, bickering idiots and I'm even happier.
Linus Radcliffe and Robert Anderson have been best friends since they were 10 years old. They were each other's first true friend, first kiss, and first lover. But after 18 years of being just friends with occasional benefits, Robert is starting to become annoyed watching Linus flit from one lover to the next. Determined to convince his best friend to become exclusive so he doesn't have to be jealous anymore (did I mention they're both stubborn idiots? :)), he has to work hard to convince him that he truly wants forever, because Linus is not ready to risk everything so easily for a man who openly prefers women and has only ever been with him...
I loved these two idiots and their bickering. Their friendship was so wonderful (they call each other "whelp" and "old man" despite of only four months separating their birthdays), and it was delight to spend time with them.
I'm sorry but I didn't like Rob and Linus much... :( I mean Linus was sweet and nice but he didn't remind me the rascal from the previous Brook Street books... :( As a matter of fact, neither did Rob!
I liked it very much that Rob fought for Linus and tried to reason his desire, but also Linus' reluctance towards a relationship. That he "consulted" his tormented feelings (and doubts) with Norton? That I liked very much, too! He wasn't too afraid to try and ask. Generally, Rob's behind-the-closed-doors behaviour surprised me and made me think highly of him and his RL abilities.
On the other hand, I did and, at the same time, didn't understand Linus' qualms about being in a steady relationship with Rob. I get it that he was afraid of losing his best friend - a friend who knew all the ugly details from Linus' past. And I get that he considered Rob mostly straight (he only ever slept with Linus as a male partner). But... but maybe he could place more faith in Rob, hmm? ;)
Anyway, a very nice addition to the Brook Street mini-series but not my favourite one. And Ava March writing style is flawless, as usual! :)
3 stars. I liked this story, but I didn't love it. An m/m historical set in the Regency, Rogues is the final book in Ava March's Brook Street trilogy. After meeting these characters earlier in the series, we see in their story how two best friends reach their HEA.
The story, in brief. Rob and Linus have been best friends since childhood, and they've shared everything together - conquests, secrets, hopes, dreams, and their first times...yes, in that way. Rob, who has always been a ladies' man, comes to recognize his jealousy of Linus's other male conquests and proposes to Linus that they become exclusive lovers. Linus, well aware of what he views as Rob's fickle nature, refuses. The rest of the story is the journey they take to alleviate Linus's worries and open Rob's eyes to what he truly wants.
The characters. Linus is kind of an asshole in the second book, so I was a little wary to read a story featuring his HEA. The outer characterization is consistent, but we have the opportunity in this story to see his vulnerability and that which motivates his caustic exterior. I actually liked him a lot more than I anticipated. Rob is sweet - he doesn't understand why Linus would say no, and it takes some introspection and his own intimate knowledge of Linus to reach the surprising conclusion. I really liked that Rob was open-minded and cared so much for his friend that he was always a patient and reassuring presence in Linus's life.
The romance and sexytimes. In keeping with my experience with Ava March's stories, I found the sexytimes here spicy. There was a level of comfort and familiarity between the two main characters that stemmed from their having been lovers for over a decade. It felt very...warm and inviting.
The romance, though, kind of stuttered for me. I guess I just didn't find the conflict all that engaging. I enjoyed seeing them reach an understanding and find their HEA, but it felt a little drawn out to me. The angst of their conflict didn't really feel justified, in my opinion.
What really shone for me was the ease of the two men's friendship. I just found their friendship to be a deeply strong and caring one, and the little gestures and actions they took in each other's company supported this bond in every way. I guess I didn't think the romantic conflict seemed all that likely when their relationship (and openness otherwise) was so apparent.
Overall. Overall, I enjoyed this novella and am glad I read it; however, I didn't find it as enjoyable as the first two books in the series. The characters were engaging, but the conflict just wasn't there to make this romance shine.
Note: Thank you to the author and Carina Press for providing a copy of this book through NetGalley.
I can't believe it but this story is even better than the first two in the series.
The fact that Linus has loved Robert for years and has totally given up on being anything more to Robert than his best friend and occasional bed partner is so sad.
Robert realizes that he cannot stand to see Linus go off with one more man for a quick liason. So he asks Linus if they can be exclusive lovers. Linus panics because he can maintain the status quo, but he is terrified that changing their relationship to lovers means that eventually they will break up and he'll lose Robert as his best friend.
So Linus fights the notion and Robert has a hard time understanding why. Lucky he has some good friends to talk to and they help him figure out why Linus is so against the idea. He also realizes that Linus has always been in love with him... and that he has always loved Linus, but was not smart enough to know it without learning some hard lessons.
Highly recommended. On my-6-star shelf. ========================================= 1st read - Jun 30, 2012 2nd read - Feb 8, 2014 read for 2014 Pushing Boundaries Challenge Audiobook - Jan 19, 2018 Audiobook - Dec 2, 2018
The final story of the Brook Street Trilogy was a nice one -- "Thief" was still my favorite among the three though. It combined friends-to-lovers and only-for-you theme.
Basically depending on the misunderstanding of what each other's actually wanted out of their dalliance, I found it started to get repetitive in the middle. However, since it was the shortest among the three -- probably because Rob and Julian was already in some sort of 'friends with benefit" situation when the story started -- it didn't annoy me to the point where I would bitch about it.
I sort of expecting an epilogue with all the three couples though ...
I'm so glad I listened to a few of my fellow Goodreaders and picked up Ava March's work. Seriously good historical romance without the inconvenience of having to put up with any horribly crafted heroines. Hot historic dudes sexin' each other up. Good plots, good writing, likable characters, great dialogue, good romance. Win.
I haven't read the other books of the trilogy, but that doesn't matter. I imagine the other characters in this book might have been familiar to me already, if I had read the first two books, but the relationship between Linus and Rob doesn't depend on seeing them in any other books, if they appeared there.
It's not a madly tense book -- I had the feeling from the start that everything would turn out alright, so it was just a pleasure to watch Rob and Linus develop, and watch Rob's understanding of Linus grow. I like reading about relationships like theirs, formed in childhood and remaining strong into adulthood, so they made me smile a lot. The sex scenes are well-written, conveying the intimacy between the two, with their feelings being clear throughout -- I hate sex scenes that just fling the characters to the winds and focus on dripping bodily fluids and so on.
All in all, I think I'll look out for the other books of this trilogy, and more by Ava March.
Probably my least favorite of the series, which is a shame, because I was looking forward to it. I liked Linus, but Rob never clicked with me. At times, he was an arse, but I did like when he realized what he was doing, and apologized.
The plot was pretty simple - it wasn't as complicated as the plots in the previous two books, no matter how hard it was forced. I felt that the conflict between Linus and Rob was made to be more than it was.
So, I didn't love it, but nor did I dislike it. It was satisfying, and I look forward to see what's next from Ava March.
I was provided a galley of this from NetGalley. This didn't affect my opinions.
The least favorite book of the series. Remember those adolescent stories about 'he-loves-me-he-loves-me-not' ? This book is a longer version of such story, only with British gentlemen. Not even 50% into the book, I started skipping scenes.
Both characters are whinny, emo guys that are more girlie than a 13-ye old girl. The only thing that saved this book from getting lower rating from me is Ms. March's flowing writing.
Fairly tedious and definitely my least favorite of the series. There's not much to this story, just some annoying push-pull between the characters regarding exclusivity. I generally find Ava March's Regency romances really enjoyable, even if they don't quite ring true to the era, but this needed more substance.
Loved this one! My favorite in the series. Anderson and Radcliffe are sweet boyhood friends to lovers.
I was hoping for some sort of epilogue including the next dinner party at Benjamin Parker's, so was disappointed with the abrupt ending. But it's still a nice HEA.
Rogues is the third book in the Brook Street series, and is technically considered a novella, coming in at 82 pages. As far as I know, it’s only going to be available in ebook form, through Carina Press, when it’s released in May.
Before we continue, I feel you should know something about me. I have a weakness for M/M stories. I try not to overindulge because it’s something of a ‘guilty pleasure’ for me to read them, but without the guilt, especially when you learn what kind of fanfiction I gravitate toward. But when you place a M/M story in Regency England, I’m sold. I will read it, even if it has the worst summary in the world. If there’s a book out there set in Regency England, featuring two male love interests and one or both of them are shapeshifters, I have a feeling it would become my favorite book of all time. (I know my reading tastes well.)
Seriously, though, if there’s a book out there like that, someone please let me know. I’m talking Regency, two hot guys and at least one or both being shapeshifters. Ideal. Book.
Once you get past the obviously photoshopped cover, which is a small thing to do since it’s an ebook, Ava starts the novella by dropping us in the middle of Rob’s struggle with his feelings of seeing Linus chat up another man at a Ton event.
I think the reason I like this setting for M/M in particular is probably due to how restrained the lead characters have to be while in each other’s presence in public. You can feel the longing and need for each other, if written well. You can experience the same thing with the usual historical romance since casual touch was very much frowned upon, but what makes it more… exciting, I guess, is if anyone ever found out about two guys being together, they could be killed for it. It was a capital offense back then. So, for two guys to be in a lasting and loving relationship, they both had to know the risks going into it, and find the patience and strength to appear as ‘just friends’ to the rest of the world. Can you imagine how hard that must have been for them? Can you understand what it might be like to love someone but never be able to tell anyone or lay claim to him for fear of your very life?
It just guts me, when I think about it and when I read these type of books.
Ava does a good job introducing this concept into Rogues, though these guys are a little freer than most since they’re friends with other men of the same persuasion. Which is good. It’s always good to have friends who know you for who you are, not for who you appear to be to the rest of the world.
What I liked most about Rogues was how Ava March managed to get me invested in these characters, lay out an entire plot and include several scenes of hot sexy times in only 80 pages. I’ve read books that go on for hundreds of pages and don’t even come close to doing the same. I noticed the same thing in Thief. She manages to flesh out her main and secondary characters in a very short amount of space, which is noteworthy in itself, which makes you, as the reader, only want more.
Overall, I found this novella a bit angsty with some cute flirting and possessive parts mixed in, as well as a few steamy parts that are always fun to read. If you like M/M books, I’d suggest starting with the first book of this series and working your way through. I doubt you’ll be disappointed.
If you have been following my reviews you already know that I love the Brook Street Trilogy. It’s my favorite new series of the year and I highly recommend them. Rogue is the final book in the series and I’m a little depressed by that. I’m not ready to say goodbye yet.
Rogue is the story of Linus and Rob. They have been best friends for 18 years and have been lovers for a decade. They don’t have the sweet, romantic relationship the other couples in this series had. Linus and Rob are friends and buddies more than anything, their sexual relationship has always been a sporadic and minor part of that friendship.
I liked that this book showed a very different relationship from the previous books. Rob is what I consider a tough guy. He is strong and proud, he knows what he wants and he goes after it. He has always preferred women, Linus is the only exception to that. Rob is surprised when he realizes that it’s the pursuit of women that’s the real thrill for him, once he has them he gets bored quickly. The only satisfying sexual relationship he has had in his adult life has been with Linus. Rob decides that Linus is exactly what he wants and he is going to get him.
Linus accepted many years ago that he preferred men. He has also accepted that Rob doesn’t feel the same way. Linus has learned to be satisfied with what Rob can give him. Linus has centered his life around the friendship with Rob and absolutely will not put their friendship in jeopardy.
The couple and their story drew me in and I couldn’t put this book down. I read it from start to finish in one evening. When I finished it I realized that even though I really liked the book I was still a bit disappointed. I think my disappointment came down to two things.
1. The book is very short. I never got to know the characters well and had to draw on my knowledge of them from previous books to fill in the details. The length of the book made me feel like I was getting a glimpse into their story rather than the entire thing. Plain and simple, I wanted more. 2. This is the story of two people that already have an established relationship and are considering taking it to the next level. That type of story is never a favorite for me. It’s interesting but it’s missing my favorite part of a romance book, the sexual tension and romantic build up.
The Brook Street Trilogy is an amazing journey through Regency-era London. The romances are deep and emotional. Give this series a try, you won’t regret it. I’m going to miss these books I’m sad to see the series come to an end.
Robert Anderson is jealous. His best friend since childhood, Linus Radcliffe, is flirting with another man. It's a common sight in the ballrooms of London's ton, but one that's become harder and harder for Rob to take. Unlike his friend, Rob generally prefers women in bed--with the very big exception of Linus. After a jealousy-fueled night of passion, he decides to take matters in hand, and proposes they become exclusive. To his surprise and dismay, Linus refuses, and walks out of his bedroom with a flippant word. Undeterred, he is determined to convince his best friend that they belong together--no matter what Linus may think.
Gay Regency romance should be an easy sell for me--two of my favorite genres in one! Unfortunately, ROGUES fell flat for me. I liked Rob, and enjoyed his inner journey from rake to monogamy, from bisexual to gay (or gay-for-you), and his stumbles along the way. His hurt and jealousy over Linus's affairs was believable and a little sad. The story starts just as he loses his patience with watching Linus waltz from bed to bed, and the reader is with him as he struggles to understand how to win Linus back. The sex scenes between the two were absolutely smoking hot, and the chemistry was palpable. I love that they weren't exclusively top or bottom--something far too rare in m/m romances. Their balance in the bedroom is an extension of their longstanding friendship and love for one another.
Linus, on the other hand, was rather annoying. His reasoning for turning Rob down--and the main conflict of the novella--just didn't ring true to me. It wasn't until Linus's second POV chapter that I even realized what his problem was; it was not clear at all the first time around. The teasers about Linus's traumatic past seemed tacked on, as if the author decided she needed another reason for Linus to be wary of monogamy with Rob, as did the bit about him having made this decision before.
Overall, I think a lot of my issues with this novella can be blamed on the lack of length. There's not much time to get to know the characters, or flesh out their pasts, or set up a satisfying conflict. The smoking sex scenes (they switch!!) and my love of Rob, in all his cluelessly domineering glory, still make this a solid three-star read. Fans of the previous books will enjoy the brief cameos by Bennett & Norton from My True Love Gave to Me and Parker from Thief.
This ARC was provided free of charge by the publisher via NetGalley for the purpose of this review.
Review copy courtesy of the publisher at RTCon 2013
If I'm remembering correctly, I think this is my first male/male romance. Of course, I've chosen a m/m romance set in the Regency era! LOL! Regency? Victorian? Whatever 1822 is! I didn't think I'd really enjoy this but I was pleasantly surprised. This was a really great read and it was SUPER hot! Just so you know, I did NOT read Brook Street #1 and #2 so I'm coming in to this book with absolutely no idea what to expect.
This will probably be a fairly short review since this was a very short novella (75 pages). I really don't love novellas, as some of you know. I just feel that 75 pages or 28,000 words is just not enough to get a full feel for all of the characters. Maybe if it was just ONE character, that would be a sufficient length. But when you're trying to get me to care about at least two characters and their current relationship AND their future relationship... I just don't think its enough.
Having said that, I thought that Rob and Linus were pretty well fleshed out in that short amount of time. Rob and Linus are best friends in Regency England and they are BOTH considered rakehells. They also occasionally have sex with each other. But now, Rob has decided that he would like for he and Linus to be exclusive. See, Linus only sleeps with men but he sleeps around, a lot! And Rob rarely keeps a woman around for more than a week. I think that Rob wants more and he's decided that he wants more with Linus. Linus isn't sure if he can trust Rob to be monogamous. So they continue on with Rob wanting more and Linus kind of putting him off and they both are exploring the idea of "more" with each other.
I thought that Rob was kind of the sweet one. I loved how jealous Rob would get over Linus when Linus would be talking to another man. I don't know if it was cute or anything, but it at least showed how intense Rob was feeling towards Linus. I also liked how Rob's attitudes and opinions changed as he learned new things about Linus. Well, new things that he THOUGHT he already knew!! Linus surprised me. I didn't really like him all that much, at first. I guess mostly it was because he kind of refuses Rob. But the more I learned about Linus, the more I liked him. I NEVER ended up liking his name though. Ugh.
Overall, even though this is WAY too short for me, I still enjoyed it! It was a nice, quick read. I think it would be even better if I had read installments 1 and 2 first but it was still pretty great without. The Sexy Time is plentiful and holy hell, it is HOT!!! I think I would recommend this book to anyone who likes a quick read and a friends-to-way more than friends story featuring a m/m love story.
I will say this installment was my favorite of the trilogy, mainly because of Linus. And I think I need to mention that the cover is just smokin’. Back to the story, while Robert is a dedicated woman chaser and Linus is a dedicated man chaser, they do share a bed on occasion. This is a sex thing for Robert, and it’s a love thing for Linus. He had hopes for a long time (and oh just sad for him) but he has put those behind him and is willing to be with Robert as his friend. In fact, he has to be with Robert as just his friend, because his heart can’t take it.
Robert finding himself jealous was interesting. It’s like he was aware of Linus for so long but all of the sudden saw him in a new capacity. I admit, there were times Robert as just aggravating, as he basically is shadowing Linus to get what he wants, going about it the only way he knows how. And poor Linus, trying so hard to guard his heart. What do you do when the object of your greatest fantasies is right there, yet you know how fickle and flighty he is when it comes to affairs of the heart? Go for it, or say no and keep his very valued friendship. Very difficult for the man. The sex between Linus and Robert is scorching. The fact that Robert was Linus’ first makes everything just sad for a bit. Of the two of them, Linus is the more in tune with himself – he knows he wants and can’t have, so he finds substitutes. Poor ones, all of them. Robert knows his best friend is Linus, with benefits, he just doesn’t go far enough in looking at himself for a while.
As always, Ava March is a master at painting the Regency times and making them come alive. The dangers of loving men during that time, dreadful. The way the households are set up make an HEA clearly possible here, which sometimes is difficult to envision in a historical setting. It was also nice to get to revisit some familiar characters. Recommended for historical fans in particular.
Edit: Listened on audio. Narrator has such a great voice. Still love it.
Linus and Robert have been the best of friends for most of their lives and they share everything, including each others beds. Though no one knows and it isn't an everyday occurrence. Normally Robert prefers to bed woman and Linus prefers other men and they never share partners. Lately Robert has been feeling restless and the more he watches Linus disappear at a ball with another man for an assassination, he finds himself growing more and more jealous. He is starting to realize that Linus stirs feelings in him that no other person can and he's tired of feeling jealous. So Robert comes up with a plan and after a heated night spent together he propositions Linus with the details-that they should see only each other no one else.
Linus can hardly believe his ears. At one time all he wanted was to be with Robert exclusively, but not now. Linus does not want things to change because he can't lose Robert. And that is what will happen if he accepts he proposition. Eventually Robert would tire of him and then leave him to be with a woman. No Linus would rather keep things they way they are.
I rather enjoyed this novella but I feel it was a bit lacking. There really wasn't anything major going on besides the relationship between Linus and Robert. I wished there could have been a bit more umph involved. More angst maybe. Though I did enjoy the relationship between them both I just wish we could have seen a bit more. I will say that the sexytimes were written very well. I definitely felt the passion between Robert and Linus.
ROGUES is the third book in the Brook Street series by Ava March. This is Robert Anderson and Linus Radcliffe’s book. Both are rogues, but their preferences in bedmates vary. While Linus prefers the company of men, Robert spends his nights with women. However, there is something special about Linus that makes Robert spend the occasional night in Linus’s bed. Their chemistry is potent and undeniable however when Robert proposes that they become exclusive lovers, Linus turns down the offer. In an effort to show him that their relationship is stronger than a regular friendship, Robert does what he can to change his mind and how him just how compatible they are.
While I have enjoyed this series immensely, I have to say that ROGUES is my least favorite of the stories. I just didn’t think that it held the same appeal as the others. I felt that there was a lot of confusion with the names because the author goes between calling them Anderson and Radcliffe one moment and then promptly switches to Linus and Rob later. It helps to clear up any confusion if you just stick with one set of names and keeping them straight throughout the story.
The plot in this book is pretty simply, unlike the other two which to me felt more interesting. I liked the story, but just didn’t think it lived up to my expectations for what I had in mind for Linus and Rob.
2 ½ stars. Wasn’t doing it for me. Not enough story. I kept wanting and waiting for something to happen.
The backstory: Robert and Linus have had occasional sex with each other for years - since they were teens. They also have frequent sex with others: Linus with men, Robert with women. Robert is never with the same woman for more than a week or so.
The current story: Robert wants an exclusive relationship with Linus - both of them to stop seeing others. Linus wants the same thing but believes Robert is incapable of having a long-term relationship. So Linus says no and avoids Robert a lot. That’s the whole story. There is a happy romantic ending.
For most of the book I didn’t understand why Linus rejected Robert’s request. His reason(s) were not good. I think the author has a good writing style. She just needs something better to write about. There were four detailed sex scenes which were ok, but I didn’t feel the passion or intense desire that I like to feel in sex scenes.
DISCLOSURE: I received a complimentary copy from the publisher Carina Press. Thank you.
DATA: Narrative mode: 3rd person. Kindle count length: 1,343 (264-287 KB) 75 pages. Swearing language: mild, including religious swear words. Sexual language: moderate. Number of sex scenes: 4. Setting: 1822 London, England. Copyright: 2012. Genre: gay male historical romance, male-male.
I cannot believe I am about to say this, but I think the Bound Series may have met its match with this novel. I loved Linus' and Robert's relationship. It was perfect! They have been best friends for nearly 2 decades and share everything. Robert finally realises he is in love with Linus but Linus refuses to be with him because he doesn't want to lose Robert - he is the only person who has ever been there for Linus.
I admit, I was quite shocked but pleased to discover this sensative side of Linus. In the previous Brook Street novels Robert and Linus make a cameo appearence and they both (especially Linus) kind of annoyed me. (i think thats because i kepy getting Linus mixed up with Randolph Amhearst from the Convincing series for some reason and also because I didn't like that he had slept with the other characters when they were meant to be with someone else - hes a slut). But they both won me over! Especially when we find out how hard life was for Linus with his scary father and how Robert was always there for him. <3
I think the reason I liked this novel in particular so much is because its theme - best friends turn lovers - is the same as the Bound Series (i always talk about this series, you MUST read it). I was also very happy when Robert figures out that Linus had always been in love with him - it was very sweet.