Riptide Presents http://www.riptidepublishing.com/titles/double-up
Blurb
Knowing he’s loved can make any man fly.
Fifteen years ago, Ben Warren was a wakeboarding champion: king of big air, ballsy tricks, and boned grabs. Until a career-ending injury left him broken in ways he still has no hope of fixing. Now he takes his thrills where he can get them, and tries not to let life hurt too much.
Then Davis Fox arrives in Ben’s sporting goods store with a plan to get in touch with his estranged brother by competing in the annual wakeboarding double-up contest. The catch? He’s never ridden before. It’s crazy, but Ben’s a sucker for the guy’s sob story—and for his dimples, too—so he agrees to coach Davis.
Davis is everything Ben isn’t: successful, confident, and in love with life. And he wants Ben to love life—and him—too. But before Ben can embrace a future with Davis, he needs to remember how to hope.
Review
(Posted on Previous Site)
Ben injured himself during a wakeboarding exhibition. He had a tremendously difficult recovery, making him reluctant to have the surgery needed to make him physically whole again. He makes do in life working for his best friend and sometimes f*ck-buddy at a boat shop where he meets Davey.
Davey is a poor-little-rich-boy who is trying to re-connect with his homophobic family through wakeboarding. Yes, that seems weird, but it works. The little brother is heavily involved in wakeboarding and by becoming involved in the sport himself, Davey can get a back-door way in to his brother’s without upsetting the really hateful step-dad.
At first glance, this looks like a light-hearted book about a slightly older guy from the wrong side of the tracks meeting and sexing a misunderstood younger guy with lots of money while participating in a unique and sexy extreme sport. And it is. But it’s also more.
There are deeper layers to this book with some surprising emotion and topical issues. The subtle way the feelings and issues are handled is really nice. There’s definitely angst but this isn’t an angsty book. Instead, it’s mostly a fun, frolicking book that is fleshed out with some angst to add weight and dimension.
Eddie is a great character full of flamboyance but with a spine of steel. He tells Davey there is a difference between being a jock and an athlete and Eddie is an athlete. Tina is another great character who divorces her wife after having a sex change (she was Timothy pre-surgery) who flirts with the bi-sexual pageant queen at the wakeboard exhibition. Ridley, Davey’s brother, is 13 going on 30 and I really liked how he helped to pull the family together.
Some books are like cotton candy: fluffy, fun, forgettable. Some are like oatmeal: heavy, thick and really stick to your ribs (and in your brain). This is like a nice heavy bread: weighty enough to give you pause and make you think a little bit, but light enough not to drown you in a sea of sodden Kleenex.
I really, really liked this book and recommend it. I will definitely be looking forward to reading more works by this author.
I give it a 4 of 5 hearts.