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A review by thebooklovebot
Always You by Samantha Young
5.0
Always You is the third book in the Adair Family series, following the Adair siblings as they find love and deal with life. It was one of my most anticipated reads this year since and gosh, it did not disappoint.
Arrochar Adair, the youngest Adair, has been in love with her brother’s best friend for a long time and after their last encounter she’s lost all hope for them.
Mackennon Galbraith has been Lachlan Adair’s bodyguard and best friend for decades. For years he’s been ignoring his feelings for Arrochar, using their thirteen years age difference to keep her distant.
This forbidden love-brothers friend-age gap-hate to love Scottish romance mixed with thrill and mystery had me deep in my feelings. It was such a crazy journey but it was amazing.
I seriously loved the character, I was really curious about them when I met them in the first books and I enjoyed getting to know them more intimately.
A super important thing in this novel was the amazing represention of men in therapy. It was written so perfectly, highlighting the ups and downs of the healing journey, especially with Mackennon. Therapy peeled him like an onion, revealing so many more parts of him we hadn’t seen before. I was in complete awe during those parts because I had never seen it talked about so deeply before in a romance book before. I hope it’s something I’ll seen more often in future book.
Thank you Valentine PR and Samantha Young for providing me with an ARC in exchange of an honest review.
Arrochar Adair, the youngest Adair, has been in love with her brother’s best friend for a long time and after their last encounter she’s lost all hope for them.
Mackennon Galbraith has been Lachlan Adair’s bodyguard and best friend for decades. For years he’s been ignoring his feelings for Arrochar, using their thirteen years age difference to keep her distant.
This forbidden love-brothers friend-age gap-hate to love Scottish romance mixed with thrill and mystery had me deep in my feelings. It was such a crazy journey but it was amazing.
I seriously loved the character, I was really curious about them when I met them in the first books and I enjoyed getting to know them more intimately.
A super important thing in this novel was the amazing represention of men in therapy. It was written so perfectly, highlighting the ups and downs of the healing journey, especially with Mackennon. Therapy peeled him like an onion, revealing so many more parts of him we hadn’t seen before. I was in complete awe during those parts because I had never seen it talked about so deeply before in a romance book before. I hope it’s something I’ll seen more often in future book.
Thank you Valentine PR and Samantha Young for providing me with an ARC in exchange of an honest review.