RELEASE DAY: REVIEW: Love & Limitations – J. Scott Coatsworth

Love & Limitations Book Cover Love & Limitations
J. Scott Coatsworth
LGBTQ Anthologies & Collections, Transgender Romance, Gay Romance
J Scott Coatsworth
Dec 6, 2023
Kindle
250
Amazon

Love & Limitations is Scott's fourth short story collection and first one featuring contemporary MM and LGBTQ+ stories:

I Only Want to Be With You: Derrek likes Ryan. Ryan likes Alex. Alex treats Ryan like trash. So why can't he see who really loves him?

The Boy in the Band: It's hard for a trans kid in high school, just like it was for a gay kid two decades before. Can Ryan and Justin find common ground in time?

Translation: Dominic has a thing for Italian guys, especially his boss, Dante. His roommate Enrico has a thing for him. No matter how this ends, someone is going to get hurt.

Slow Thaw: As the Antarctic warms, so does the chilly relationship between scientist Javier Fernandez and new arrival-and trans man-Col Steele as they contend with a disaster on the ice.

Ten: After the death of his husband, Chris faces a gay mid-life crisis-at thirty-five-as he jumps back into the dating scene for ten dates in ten days.
This is the first time all of these stories have all been collected in one place, and the first publication of the The Boy in the Band in any form.

 

Review By Ulysses Dietz

Member of the Paranormal Romance Guild Review Team

This collection of five long stories is all about love, but these are not about insta-love or easy love. Each story is a journey, and sometimes a difficult journey. As Scott Coatsworth says in his foreword, there is light in all of them, but other emotions share the spotlight. It is notable that three of these five stories feature trans men as central characters. Every story is strikingly different, despite their shared themes of friendship, loss, and hope. They’re all really good.

“I only want to be with you” is as close to a classic rom-com story as this collection offers, but a distinctly sober rom-com. Derrek and Ryan are old friends, and both have suffered great loss in their lives. As Christmas approaches, Derrek looks to Ryan for solace over the loss of his mother, but gets caught up in Ryan’s own faltering relationship. It’s a complicated pas-de-deux, which Coatsworth resolves with skill and sensitivity.

“The Boy in the Band” made me weep. A middle-aged gay man in a longterm relationship offers help to a trans boy struggling for his life in a hostile world. This was another delicate piece of narrative choreography, and it works so very well.

“Translation” is another classic story with a twist. Domenic, a would-be writer, has a crush on his Italian boss Dante, who himself has just come off a disastrous break-up. Love sometimes makes people do stupid things, but this is a case where wisdom follows stupidity and surprises everyone. I was looking for the easy answer here, but I didn’t get it.

“Slow Thaw” is an adventure story, and incorporates Scott’s passion for writing about climate change. A love story set in Antarctica is unlikely enough, but Scott pushes this into exciting territory.

Finally, “Ten” is another story about a young man grieving over a recent shattering loss. Urged on by his memories of his late husband Ari, Chris decides to date ten nights in a row as Christmas approaches, hoping to find “the one” to help him move on. The story is a gentle survey of young gay men (or maybe all gay men) and their prejudices, and how we limit our chances of happiness by unwillingness to make a leap.

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