Where You'll Find Him by Mel Bossa

WhereYoullFindHimLGTitle: Where You’ll Find Him
Series: N/A
Author: Mel Bossa
Genre: Contemporary
Length: Novel (203 pages)
Publisher: Dreamspinner Press (18 May 2015)
Heat Level: Low
Heart Rating: ♥♥♥♥3.5Hearts

Blurb: During Pride week in Montreal, Wolfe learns the board is threatening to shut down the YBR queer community center. He can’t let this happen, not while he’s the director and responsible for everyone there. They tell him he’s just a kid, too young to handle these responsibilities, but Wolfe is determined to prove to everyone, including the rich family he left behind, that he’s strong enough to do the job, even if it leaves him with little time for love.

But then devastatingly handsome Gaspard walks up to the YBR stand on Pride community day. Freshly divorced and father to two grown children, Gaspard is finally out of the closet as bisexual, and single for the first time in thirty years. Gaspard falls for Wolfe in a way he’s not prepared for. But as relationships unravel, Gaspard resists his passion for a man young enough to be his son.

Wolfe has spent his life fighting for what he wants. And what he wants is Gaspard.

ISBN: 9781632169310

Product Link: https://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/product_info.php?products_id=6410

Reviewer: Prime

Review: Where You’ll Find Him is the first book I’ve read by Mel Bossa and overall it is a rather charming tale May-December romance. However, as I think on it, I find that I was more disappointed by the overall feel of the book.

Gaspard is an older man gent who, while exploring the ManLove side of his bisexuality. He further personal life drama in the form of two grown kids who are coming to terms with their mother and father being bisexual in very different ways. Gaspard meets Wolfe, who is the same age as his rather immature son, but the attraction between the two of them is instantaneous.

It’s sometimes a rather light-hearted read, and some of the minor characters help to lend this feel, particularly Gaspard’s daughter, Malena. Some of the more serious and deeper emotions were more difficult to connect with, which I found disappointing when the plot itself was so fascinating and enjoyable.

I think because so many complex matters were including: we read about the lovers, we read about both of their personal lives/conflicts, we have the conflict of more than one minor character. Because of this I felt that sometimes the story stopped and started up again in some places. It’s just that disconnect that I felt through the story meant that I could not be as emotionally invested as I really wanted or felt that I should be.

Yet in saying all that, I really did adore Gaspard and Wolfe.
The one thing that I have to talk about in the fact that I did not like it over much was the epilogue. It threw me off for a bit. For one, I found it confusing and had to re-read it twice. Secondly, it felt as though it was a short story about the couple rather  than a conclusion.

* I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review through http://mmgoodbookreviews.wordpress.com *