The Fall
by:
Kate Sherwood (author)
Every relationship leaves something behind. Dumped by his sugar daddy, part-time model Scott Mackenzie somehow ends up owning an abandoned church in rural Ontario. He dreams of using it for gay weddings, even if he’ll never have one of his own. Joe Sutton is trying to keep his family together...
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Every relationship leaves something behind. Dumped by his sugar daddy, part-time model Scott Mackenzie somehow ends up owning an abandoned church in rural Ontario. He dreams of using it for gay weddings, even if he’ll never have one of his own.
Joe Sutton is trying to keep his family together after his parents’ deaths. Between the family ranch, his brother’s construction company, and commitments around town, he doesn’t have time for a relationship. But Mackenzie is hard to ignore.
As both men fight their growing attraction, challenges to Mackenzie’s business threaten their relationship. If he can’t make it work, he’ll have to crawl back to the city in defeat. But the only solution involves risking the ranch Joe loves, and each man has to decide how much he’ll sacrifice for the other.
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Format: ebook
ISBN:
9781627983891 (1627983899)
Publish date: December 16th 2013
Publisher: Dreamspinner Press
Edition language: English
Series: The Fall (#1)
Good I really liked the family dynamics in this story. They all band together and work together, with the exception of one, and prove a loving and supporting bunch. In relation to the one, I think in a family that has as many people, you are always going to have one member who believes they are more...
I liked this one but again, like the previous story I read by Kate, I didn't feel a true connection between the characters.
Family plays an important role in this book. Joe and Will are trying to keep their family together after the death of their parents. Joe is keeping everyone happy and meeting their needs at the expense of his own life and happiness. When the one family member not living in the area shows up unannoun...
4 I love Joe starsReview to come
A nice enough story with an emphasis on the storyboarding of one character. Joe's family background and history is compelling, but for me it came at the expense of Mackenzie's story -- which was odd, because Mackenzie's the one with the angsty, abusive past. The relationship between the two thins ou...