REVIEW: Forty-Seven Duology by Nora Phoenix



Review:

What a fresh and heartfelt duology by @nora.phoenix

Exploring religious homophobia, addiction, daddy boy lifestyle, redemption, and discovering happiness when you finally live for yourself.

Kinsey thought he lost everything when, at 47, he finally came out as gay and admitted to using drugs to cope. He lost his job and his family, now he's trying to rebuild and finally live his true self, alone.

Enter Benoni, his personal trainer, 20 years younger, and his son's best friend. Plenty of reasons to keep their distance, but Ben is a caregiver at heart and Kinsey hits all his buttons and Kinsey needs one.

It was a truly beautiful story.




Clean Start, Book 1

Synopsis:

I’m done hiding who I am.

Pretending to be straight, to be the loving, devoted husband and successful ER doctor everyone wanted me to be has been exhausting.

I numbed the pain anyway I could, and in the end, it cost me everything. My job, my marriage, the relationship with my grown kids.

But now I’m in recovery, and for the first time, I’m living my true life as an out gay man.

I need to get my act together, to get healthy again. Benoni is my new personal trainer…twenty years my junior. He makes my mouth water and certain other body parts react. Oh, and he’s also my son’s best friend.

I’m forty-seven years old. It’s time for a clean start. But where does Benoni fit in?

Clean Start at Forty-Seven is part one of a duology, an emotional MM romance with an age gap, first time gay, loads of hurt/comfort, and the beginnings of a beautiful Daddy/boy relationship. It contains themes of opioid addiction and religious homophobia. Please check the trigger warnings in the front of the book.



New Daddy, Book 2

Synopsis:

I’ve never been a Daddy before, but now it’s all I want to be…

I’ve always thought Kinsey was hot AF, but now that I’ve come to know him, he’s so much more than a super sexy silver fox. He’s kind and caring, and so damn courageous.

He’s also vulnerable and needy, and it lights me up like nothing else. I know I’m twenty years younger, but I want to take care of him.

I want to be his protector, his strong man, his knight in shining armor.

I want to be his Daddy.

New Daddy at Forty-Seven is part two of a duology, an emotional and yummy romance with an age gap, loads of hurt/comfort, and a beautiful Daddy/boy relationship that ends with an HEA. It contains themes of addiction and religious homophobia.

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