Nowhere Diner Finding Love
(Gay / Erotic Romance / Contemporary / Series) Leaving Minnesota, Timothy Gapin doesn’t have any plans except getting as far away from all the memories as he may before his cash runs out. His mystery lover has married, breaking his heart and making him chose a life in the open rather than a kinship built on lies. Little does Tim recognise that four days later he would grab dinner at a diner and find a place to stop. Somehow this diner in the middle of nowhere becomes his home and the persons who work there his family. In addition to the laborers at the diner, Tim meets Bernie Capley, a long-haul trucker who isn’t all he seems to be. Falling in love with Bernie is easy for Tim, but the past has a way of barging into the present, forcing conclusions that affect their future…
Most helpful customer reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Hope there is more to come! By R.Parklane This is one romance which you can sit back, relax and enjoy. Sort of an old fashioned story line but nicely paced with a bunch of appealing characters. Reminds me of Z.A. Maxfield’s St Nacho’s but less angst ridden and therefore “easier” to read and enjoy. Both Tim and Bernie are a cute couple. A bit of revelation as the story unfolds as Tim’s lost love is not as it seems. And you just have to be happy for Tim when he finds himself a hunk of a boy friend in a caring Bernie who has the means to help him and much more. The cast of characters in this nowhere diner is a neat bunch and there surely is potential for more stories.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Nowhere Diner: Finding Love by T.A. Chase By Elisa Tim is a country boy at heart. He is from a small town USA, farm county, but on the contrary of most young people like him, he loves to live there, he loves the warm atmosphere and that everyone knows everyone else and you care for your neighbor. Maybe most of this attitude is due to the fact that Tim grew up in an accepting family, orphan when he was few years old he was brought up by his aunt and her husband, a couple that had lost hope to have a son for their own. Being older than ordinary parents and old fashioned, they never spoke loudly of the nephew’s sexual preferences, but they neither made him feel uncomfortable or unwelcomed. Problem is that the small town didn’t do the same and Tim ended up in an abusive relationship with a same age man. Being alone and desperate for love, Tim mistook his relationship with Aaron for love and it took him 10 years to understand the truth. And it was never his own understanding, but he was forced to face the reality: Aaron got married with a woman and wanted for Tim to continue being his little dirty secret as always.
Despite loving his family and the place where he lives, Tim understands that it’s time to leave. He takes the first bus out of town, without real destination. Three days later he is in a diner just out of Austin, waiting for the next bus to leave. The place is like a mirror of his own life, only at the contrary: the nephew of the owner of the diner, a young gay man, living in an accepting environment and with a boyfriend who is not ashamed to openly love him, wants something different for his life; he wants the glittering of the big city, and suddenly leaves the place and the job. Tim is just there to take his place and his life: he has now a job in a place where more or less, everyone else is gay or gay friendly; it’s a bit an utopical place, above all in Texas, but it’s a small place in the world. The secret is to not leave the border of the diner, and life can be good.
In few days Tim has a new life, a new job, a new place where to live and also a possible new boyfriend, Bernie. Bernie is a long haul truck driver, who periodically stops at the diner before going home in Austin. Even if he has the body of a trucker, big, strong and reserved, Bernie is odd around the edges; he is very gentle and very cultured, he lives in a good neighborhood, he has his own property and drives expensive cars… there is something strange in him, but it’s not a “bad” strange, more another fairy tale piece to the dreamy atmosphere of the diner.
The story is sweet and simple, as I said almost fairy tale. Everything for Tim clicks in the right way if he lives inside the protective shield of the diner; and if he has to leave, it’s enough for him to bring along someone like Bernie, that is part of that dream. The story is not a paranormal tale, but more a contemporary tale with a lot of optimism; the bad big world is out there, and it’s not that is not acknowledge, the author only prefers to cover it up with a veil that soothe off the sharpness of it.
As always, both in contemporary stories than fantasy than paranormal, T.A. Chase adds the right dose of sex, good, healthy and with just enough details to satisfy.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Nowhere Diner By M. Nix When the man he loved married someone else Timothy Gapin knew he could know longer live in the same town where he would contantly see them together. With a broken heart, Tim boards a bus with no particular destination in mind. A few days into his journey Tim lands at a diner in the middle of nowhere. A simple dinner turned into something more when Tim finds himself drawn to the employees and the customers of the diner, especially one customer in particular. Truck driver Bernie Capley caught Tim’s attention from the moment he saw him. However, when Tim’s’ past resurrects itself will it threaten his future with Bernie?
Nowhere Diner: Finding Love is a great story concept, but I had a hard time getting into it and finding any real feelings for the characters. The story is written first person, from Tim’s point of view, and for me Tim wasn’t strong enough or interesting enough of a character to carry the story. Nowhere Diner: Finding Love was full of other exciting characters and if the point of view fluctuated or if this was a written third person I think it would have liked it more. I definitely wanted more of an insight into Bernie as I felt he was still a mystery after the story ended. As a TA Chase fan I’m happy to read anything of his, but unfortunately Nowhere Diner: Finding Love fell short of what I normally expect from him.
Ley Reviewed for Joyfully Reviewed
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