Member Reviews
this book was fun, but i didn’t enjoy it as much as book 1.
the blackmail plot was a bit boring to me. i also disliked how the mc slept with someone other than his li, but that’s just me personally.
other than that, this book had some things i did enjoy! i loved bobbys family and how close they all are, and how you can feel the love they have for each other. i also liked when james argued back to his stepfather and kicked him out.
the romance was fun once it properly started, i just wish it had been quicker. i also loved the marriage ideas so both couples can really be together
This was a fun, light read, if a bit predictable at times.
The first 50% of this book is paced slowly, with our two protagonists James and Bobby struggling to fall into common ground. For James, he is trying his hardest to avoid Bobby Mason at all costs, Bobby however, has different plans.
The second half of the book is where the romance really picks up, with some light spice and wholesome moments. I did feel as though the 'love' was slightly rushed and I guessed how the book would end at around 45% in but that didn't make it less enjoyable.
This was a really unique read and I'm happy it now exists in the world for LGBTQ+ & Historical Romance lovers!
This is a historical LGBT+ romance with a supportive family and friendship ring. We have some iconic moments including, but not limited to:
-Angry Kisses
-The use of the word 'romp'
-Blackmail
-Beth and Gwen content
-Beards
-An adorable epilogue
Thankyou to Netgalley and Penguin for an e-arc in exchange for an honest review.
I requested this book expecting a funny queer regency romp, and it did not disappoint - though it was also so much more. Hilarious, sexy, emotional and genuine, it has made me not only fall in love with the main characters, but also crave more from the world; coming into the series at the second book, going back to read the first is now a must!
I adore Emma R Alban’s writing. This story was a beautiful and well written story about love. As a massive historical fan I loved this book. With a gay twist. This book has found family and full of angst and love that I just enjoy so much in my reading.
This book was. Little bit slow for me that’s why I’m knocking off a star but that didn’t pull away from how much I loved this book.
Robert 'Bobby' Mason is the second son, his older brother Albert 'Albie' is Lord Mason recently married to Meredith who is expecting their first child. Bobby's cousin Gwen (one of the MCs of the previous book in this series) is in a relationship with Beth, who is Lord James Demeroven's cousin. Bobby and Albie's uncle (and Gwen's father) is Dashiell, Earl of Havenfort, just to make life complicated Dashiell has married Beth's mother. Lord Havenfort is trying to pass a bill in the House of Lords requiring doctors to have received some kind of medical training and he has enlisted Albie and James' help which maks Bobby (who doesn't have a seta in the House of Lords) feel excluded. Meanwhile, James is fighting to stay upright under the yoke of his stepfather's ire and caustic tongue.
As a consequence of all the above, Bobby and James are thrust into each others' company more often than they would like, especially since James had a crush on Bobby when they were at Oxford together, although luckily Bobby had no idea and doesn't recognise James at all.
Unfortunately, both james and Bobby fall foul of Lord Raverson, who likes to sleep with men and then blackmail them. Despite their differences they need to work together to get out of his grasping clutches.
Full disclosure, I read about a third of this, gave up, and then restarted several months later. My biggest problems were firstly the incestuous (figuratively speaking) relationships which made it difficult for me to work out who was who (especially since people were often called by several names eg Bobby, Robert, Mason etc), and secondly that they didn't seem to be any difference between Bobby and James' voices as each chapter was from alternating POVs but not a lot changed.
Overall, I just found it hard to keep the characters straight and there wasn't enough historical detail to really give me a sense of exactly when this was set (late 1850s apparently), although again that may be because I I don't have sufficient historical knowledge to know that the Medical Act (which was a real thing) was passed in 1858.
It was okay but I wouldn't go out of my way to read others in the series.
I received an ARC from the publisher via NetGalley.
I loved More Than a Best Friend and have been dying to read this book but unfortunately I'm gonna have to DNF for now. I really struggled to get into this book and care about the characters and though I read a good chunk of it, I felt like not much was actually happening. Having said that, I think my timing wasn't great so I'm definitely going to to read this again at some point and hopefully it'll go a lot better!
I can't seem to get my thoughts together on this one.
It's a cute and I daresay cosy MM romance, full of miscommunication and an enemies-to-lovers trope which is probably why I enjoyed it. I was simply here for the vibes. Had I known it follows characters from a previous book I don't think I'd have requested to read it and maybe I would have been a little less confused at times, but I enjoyed it for what it was nonetheless.
I think I'm figuring out that historical romance isn't for me, maybe.
I received an advance copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Unfortunately this book wasn't for me. I have classed this book as a did not finish for a variety of reasons:
> Writing style: the book is difficult to follow
>Boring, for the first 100 pages of the book nothing really happens, I wasn't able to carry on reading when nothing good was expected.
>Characters and who they are seems very confusing
I really enjoyed the first book, More Than a Best Friend so was incredibly eager to dive into it's follow-up. Let me tell you, it did not disappoint! In this book we follow Bobby and James and my God then tension and chemistry between these two was absolutely off the charts. It was such a great enemies to lovers tale with the two just being forced into situations where they have work together despite how infuriating (and infatuating) they find each other.
I loved these characters a lot and I loved the return of our main characters from the first book. I feel like side characters who weren't as prominent in the first book definitely got their time to shine in this one and I loved getting to know them more!
Honestly if you love queer historical romance with amazing characters who you cannot help but root for I definitely recommend this duology!
Thank you so much to NetGalley and the publisher for providing me with a copy of the book in exchange for an honest review
I have been anxiously awaiting this book since I devoured More Than A Best Friend. And when I tell you I was so close to throwing hands with my partner and anyone else who got in my way while reading… Not only do we get more of Bobby, we get to meet the scrummy Viscount Demeroven.
Was my heart in my stomach from about the halfway point? Maybe. Did I cry? Definitely? Was the ending the most wibbly, satisfying, happy-tear filled kind? Yes.
This is the only kind of period romance I want going forward. Queer and happy.
— 3 stars
⭐️⭐️⭐️
📖 𝐩𝐚𝐠𝐞 𝐜𝐨𝐮𝐧𝐭: 384 pages
👤 𝐚𝐮𝐭𝐡𝐨𝐫: Emma R. Alban
🏢 𝐩𝐮𝐛𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐡𝐞𝐫: Viking Books, Penguin UK
📅 𝐫𝐞𝐥𝐞𝐚𝐬𝐞 𝐝𝐚𝐭𝐞: 15 August 2024
What you can expect:
— Queer Historical Romance
— Interconnected Standalone Series
— Third Person X Dual POV
— Achillean Enemies-To-Lovers
— Only One Bed
— Secret Relationship
— Heated Lawn Games
— "I Am NOT Attracted To Him"
— Meddling & Well-Meaning Family
— Found Family
— Blackmail & Scheming
𝐒𝐲𝐧𝐨𝐩𝐬𝐢𝐬:
You're the Problem, It's You is the second instalment in the Mischief & Matchmaking series by author Emma R. Alban. There’s a fine line between love and hate. Bobby Mason is sick of being second best: born the spare with the personality of the heir. James Demeroven, is a Viscount who wishes he wasn’t one. His title brings far too much attention. They can barely get through a single conversation without tensions boiling over. Neither Bobby nor James has ever met a more intriguing, infuriating, infatuating man. If only they could avoid each other entirely. But when an extortionist starts targeting their families, Bobby and James must find a way to work together, without pushing each other’s buttons (or tearing them off) in the process...
𝐖𝐫𝐢𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐒𝐮𝐦𝐦𝐚𝐫𝐲:
Whilst the ending of More Than a Best Friend felt satisfactory enough to feel like a complete ending... I was beyond thrilled for the continuation of this story as we join Bobby and James in their path to love and acceptance. Whilst I had been hoping for yet another feel-good and cosy love story which set out to challenge their era and societal standards, I'm truly devastated to say that this highly anticipated follow-up has not hit its mark for me. The pacing throughout the entire first half threw me off as I struggled to push myself through repetitive arguments with no end in sight. Whilst I easily devoured and enjoyed its predecessor, You're the Problem, It's You struggled to maintain that momentum and carry the plot forward. The return of my favourite characters from the first instalment were what saved the story and prompted me to continue into a thankfully stronger second half of a story. For a book that sits at less than 400 pages, I found myself often eyeing my kindle to gauge how long I was estimated to have left. The story thankfully picked up within the halfway point and I quickly became enraptured and engaged with the love story I was being foretold... it's just a shame the weak beginning had to be saved by a much stronger end.
𝐏𝐥𝐨𝐭:
The overall plot was enjoyable to follow despite its predictability at times. When James finds himself reunited with his previous infatuation and school crush Bobby in a club where men are free to act upon their true selves and desires, he stumbles. Never did he anticipate that the fantasies of his younger self may come to fruition, or that Bobby made indeed desire him in return. Unfortunately for James his mouth often runs away with him as he struggles to accurately articulate himself in social settings, which as a result is often the cause of upset and disdain from the peers he greatly wishes to earn respect from. Not that it matters anyway, when a previous slivers out of the shadows with the threat of outing him to society if he doesn't deliver on what he wants. James accepts that he cannot be both. The Viscount with a high standing in society and parliament who desperately wishes to perform better than the man before him, and the man who wishes to stay true to himself as he finds a family who will love and accept him as he was born to be... or can't he? My issue with the plot was how slow-moving the first half was. As soon as his former lover came slinking out of the shadows with threats of revealing not only his own nature but also Bobby's, James should have immediately taken action rather than try to pretend that the issue didn't exist. The second half of the story proved the joyful realities of entrusting the right people to keep you safe and support you no matter what. I honestly would've been happier for the book to be shortened in length if it meant rounding up the story for a more concise and straight-to-the-point story that didn't find itself trapped in a vicious cycle of repetition.
𝐂𝐡𝐚𝐫𝐚𝐜𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐬:
Bobby Mason has struggled with feeling second best his entire life. The second-born and spare to the family title and fortune with no set direction in which his life should take. Bobby wanders aimlessly from one season to the next, one party to the other, wishing he could find his purpose within his family and within society itself. His preference towards men has him reluctant to find a wife and live his life dishonestly, so instead Bobby partakes in fruitless intimate encounters to try and stave off his drowning feeling on loneliness and abandon. My favourite thing about Bobby was his unwavering loyalty and care towards those in his trusted circle. Despite struggling with his own wants and feelings, Bobby did the best that he could to remain present in being the best brother, cousin, nephew and friend that he could be. All Bobby craved was the love and affection that others could so loudly proclaim in public, whilst his own afflictions would be deemed as shameful and worthy of prison. Bobby craved acceptance and to find a true partner that would waver the storm by his side without fault, and I was thrilled to see him gain this and more by the end. Honestly, my only complaint is that I wish Bobby had more of a backbone when it came to James. I loved his understanding and overall patience, but in the end he continued to allow his own heartbreak as a result. Bobby deserved to be made into a priority, and I just wish I had gotten the chance to see him be the one to demand it.
James Demeroven is the surly and at-times rude Viscount who has newly aged into his appointed title and fortune, and not the slightest clue on what to do with it. With his horrid stepfather constantly in his ear belittling his authority and undermining him at every turn, James is at a loss and finds himself wishing for it all to go away. I felt for James's character as it was clear that he was treading shark-infested waters with no land in site to save him. All James wanted was to earn the respect of his family and maybe, just maybe, be lucky enough to be welcomed into their tight circle as one of their own. I really felt for his character as I could understand what the motivations behind the decisions may be, whilst feeling equally frustrated at his stubbornness and refusal to trust. His stepfather's emotionally manipulative actions have left James anxious and utterly terrified to reach out his hand to those who reach first, and I was proud to see the work that he put into his own growth and development. His tenancy to run was aggravating as I desperately wished for James to find his inner strength and fight for the life that he wanted, however I also understand that it's not always going to be that simple. His respect and adoration for Bobby was really sweet and heart-warming, even when all they seemed able to do was bring out the worst within one another, and I was thrilled to see the maturity and growth that he found by the end.
𝐑𝐞𝐥𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐬𝐡𝐢𝐩 𝐃𝐞𝐯𝐞𝐥𝐨𝐩𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭:
Bobby and James's relationship development was wholly aggravating within the first half of the story. The miscommunication, or complete lack of communication should I say, was dragged on for too much of the story which greatly hindered the believability of their love match. The pair couldn't go a single conversation without exchanging jibes or insults as they truly brought out the worst in each other. I understand that this stemmed from their clashing of their lack of understanding regarding how they approached their own hidden desires. James couldn't fathom how Bobby had manged to find himself within a safe space to express himself freely, whilst Bobby strongly disliked how James hid himself away and made him feel shameful for being true to himself. If they had managed to hold a single civilised conversation without butting heads two sentences in, so much of their conflict could have been swiftly resolved.
By the half-way mark they finally seemed to settle upon the decision to be friends... just to spend a week in the countryside and feel madly in-love. I honestly wish that Bobby and James had been given actual time to grown into a stable friendship who took the time to actually get to know one another. The majority of their relationship conflict stemmed from inaccurate assumptions and lack of understanding. Getting to see them build a solid friendship to act as a fall-back for their romantic relationship would've deepened their overall connection and chemistry. That being said, I did like them as a couple at the end. Their agreement with Beth and Gwen was really sweet, and I was thrilled to see their loved ones fully backing them with nothing but unchallenged love and support.
𝐅𝐢𝐧𝐚𝐥 𝐓𝐡𝐨𝐮𝐠𝐡𝐭𝐬:
After adoring the first book in the Mischief & Matchmaking I'm really gutted that my expectations for the sequel have not been met. In my opinion Beth and Gwen once again stole the show and all of my attention, which ultimately shouldn't be the case in a story where their presence should be secondary. I adored the overall themes to the story and the premise that love will always find a way to win no matter what, and the epilogue was definitely my favourite part to the entire book. Seeing everybody together as they had found a way to fight for their right to love in the safest way possible, with a family that they get to proudly call their own, makes their journey all-the worthwhile.
𝐓𝐡𝐚𝐧𝐤 𝐲𝐨𝐮 𝐭𝐨 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐩𝐮𝐛𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐡𝐞𝐫 𝐟𝐨𝐫 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐀𝐑𝐂 𝐭𝐨 𝐫𝐞𝐚𝐝 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐫𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰.
This book felt very cluttered in parts. There were too many characters to keep a track of and then a lack of consistency in how characters were referred to (my brain refused to believe that Bobby and Mason were the same person).
I also found the conflict between James and Bobby a bit annoying. There didn’t really seem to be any reason why they didn’t like each other and then they just refused to listen to one another and that was also annoying. Along with feeling cluttered, it also felt rushed in parts.
This was a fine read, but unfortunately wasn’t for me.
3.5 stars. Thank you to netgalley for an eARC of this book.
This was a sweet book and I did enjoy it very much. However, I fel Gwen and Beth's storyline was better. The threat snd peril in this installment felt under developed and the wedding was a little rushed but it was still satisfying to see the baddie get their comeuppance!
If you're into a bit of Brigertonesque gayness, with found family and coming of age then this is highly recommended.
Thank you to @penguinrandomhouseuk , @netgalley and the author for the arc in exchange for an honest review.
With it's easy readability, likable characters and Taylor Swift lyrics inspired romance, this is a fast, fun read for lovers of regency romance and Bridgerton, with an lgbtq+ twist! Overall it's a great summer read. #youretheproblemitsyou #arcreview #lgbtqromancebooks
I found the regency element of this book, which is admittedly quite a large part of what makes the book, difficult to follow. I found I was getting characters confused more easily than I do with other books.
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The characters seemed to be interesting enough, I just personally found the book difficult to get into. I wasn't super invested in the plot, and I believe that the problem I was running into is the simple fact that it's a historical romance (that's the best description I can come across) or a regency romance.
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I liked the representation, and the historical accuracy of how gay men got married to women, but some of them still acted on their interest in men, either with or without the knowledge of their wives.
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Thank you to NetGalley for sending me an ARC copy of this book.
another wonderful queer historical romance to add to my shelves and I was so lucky to also get my hands on a physical copy! the cover is absolutely gorgeous and this story is going to blow me away!
thank you so much net galley & penguin books uk for the arc !
This was a cute read, but it did feel like it could use another round of edits as it went on a bit. Not quite as good as the first one, but it was nice to see how the story wrapped up.
I really enjoyed this one! James' story and character slotted so well in to the world created in 'More Than a Best Friend' and seeing Bobby flourish from side character to lead was a joy too. I've read a lot of romance novels where it's just the two main characters against the world but what I love about this series is the strong sense of community and family. It helped establish Bobby and James as more than two dimensional characters with wants and needs beyond each other.
Having read the previous, I liked seeing the continuation of the political subplot, this time getting more of a front seat. It was also great to see the returning cast of side characters, particularly Albie who has his own set of difficulties.
Personally, I wouldn't have minded a bit more of a struggle with the final conflict but the way it was dealt with was both entertaining and clever.
Overall, a great read and a tidy conclusion to Gwen and Beth's story as well as James and Bobby's. I look forward to reading more from this author.
This was so cute!
The writing style and the palpable chemistry between the characters in this historical romance were truly captivating. For those who appreciate the allure of a well-crafted historical romance, this book is a must-read.
While I enjoyed the romance in the book for the most part, be aware that it contains a lot of miscommunication, which added a layer of tension and drama to the story, but it also irked me *a lot*. I also need to mention that It was VERY instalovey, and I adore a slowburn, so that added an aspect that I didn't enjoy.
But if you're looking for a fun and easy queer romance, then I would confidently recommend it!
This book was just an absolute blast from start to finish. Even though I hadn’t read the previous book in the series I was able to jump right in, getting straight into the action with our two leads.
In a book like this you have to be rooting for the main couple, and oh boy was I rooting for them! They had chemistry from the get-go, and it was so much fun seeing their romance unfold.
I also loved the depiction of a wider queer scene, something which rarely gets depicted in historical fiction. Even though the threat of discovery was very real, it was something that the characters lived alongside, and found ways to express their sexuality in a more underground way.
My main gripe is that I didn’t really get a sense of the book’s time period. It was billed as a regency romance, but it was set in the Victorian era, and often it had an Edwardian vibe to it. Historical romance and historical accuracy have never been the best of friends (apart from anything else, ‘historical accuracy’ is often used to limit rather than expand the stories told). Even so, I wanted to feel just a little bit more rooted in the story and setting, as it interrupted the reading experience a few times.
Overall though, this was a really fun romance, and I’m intrigued to go back and read the first book!
I received a free copy for an honest review.