Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025--San Antonio
Him by Sarina Bowen and Elle Kenedy is a novel from 10 years ago that fits within what I have read is a current trend of gay romance hockey stories. It is well enough written that it was been translated into 10 languages. There was one "hitch" at the beginning that made me question whether it was well written or not; I don't recall what it was. But it turned into a well-written, funny, and entertaining story about two boys who attended an elite summer hockey training camp throughout high school, didn't talk to each other throughout their college years because of a situation that occurred the last night of their last season at the camp, but met again when they were both drafted for NHL teams at the end of their college careers, and spent a final summer together back at the camp as coaches. One has been openly gay throughout college. The other has believed he was straight but is now, in the summer before they report to their teams, discovering he is bisexual. The one who is bisexual is questioning whether he really wants to go professional as a goalie since there is a good chance he might not get to play much and that he might be sent to a lower level team. He enjoys coaching and starts wondering if he might be better off not reporting to his team and trying to find a job as a defensive coach for a minor league hockey team. The one who is gay wants to make it as a professional, but he feels he must return "to the closet" at least during his first year as a profession due to homophobia being a known problem within professional sports. As with most romance novels of any kind, I found it had more and longer descriptive sexual encounters than I really wanted to read; they just slowed down the progression of the story. I gave the book 4 stars out of 5.