Never a Hero
by:
Marie Sexton (author)
Owen Meade is desperately in need of a hero. Raised by a mother who made him ashamed of his stutter, his sexual orientation, and his congenitally amputated arm, Owen lives like a hermit in his Tucker Springs apartment. But then hunky veterinarian Nick Reynolds moves in downstairs.Nick is sexy and...
show more
Owen Meade is desperately in need of a hero. Raised by a mother who made him ashamed of his stutter, his sexual orientation, and his congenitally amputated arm, Owen lives like a hermit in his Tucker Springs apartment. But then hunky veterinarian Nick Reynolds moves in downstairs.Nick is sexy and confident, and makes Owen comfortable with himself in a way nobody ever has. He also introduces Owen to his firecracker of a little sister, who was born with a similar congenital amputation but never let it stand in her way. When she signs the two of them up for piano lessons—and insists that they play together in a recital—Owen can’t find a way to say no. Especially since it gives him a good excuse to spend more time with Nick.Owen knows he’s falling hard for his neighbor, but every time he gets close, Nick inexplicably pulls away. Battling his mother’s scorn and Nick’s secrets, Owen soon realizes that instead of waiting for a hero, it’s time to be one—for himself and for Nick.
show less
Format: kindle
ASIN: B00CR3DO7O
Publish date: May 13th 2013
Publisher: Riptide Publishing
Pages no: 167
Edition language: English
Series: Tucker Springs (#5)
This story has a great plot with real characters.
I love reading Marie Sexton. This is the one that I didn't enjoy and its because of me not her. Possible Spoiler! I don't like reading about characters with AIDS or HIV. Nope, I don't like it one bit. Sorry. It really is my hangup. NOPE! I did find everything else to be purely captivating.
This was almost a 5-star read for me - it tackles difficult subjects and does it really well, I think. I was in tears for half the book, and smiling stupidly for the other half, and I loved how everything was solved in the end. The only problem is that the MC's mother felt like caricature bad guy - ...
3.5 stars. Spoilerish, so read with caution. I tried to be vague, but I still think you can easily figure it out. I was very disappointed and angry with Owen's reaction to Nick's admission. I do understand being scared, but with all of Owen's talk about how other peoples' reactions affect him, y...
Poorly characterised and barely plotted, this one pushes the envelope that much further with the inclusion of terrible female characters. Even the little sister (with the uncannily exact same disability) has some of her agency removed by making her a flake who just jumps from interest to interest (...