Having only read one previous book in this series, Sam and Aaron now has me going back to fill in my reading gaps. I *like* these people. All of them - not just the main couple. Smithfield is nice. The people who live there are nice. These feel like people that could exist in real life, aren't prone to dramatics, and aren't riding the Angst Train to Angsty-Town.My only quibble with this entry is that I felt Sam didn't demand answers from Aaron soon enough - but it's a light, fun read. A brain candy read. A chocolate chip cookie read. A Calgon Take Me Away read. A solid B- on my personal scale. Men of Smithfield: Sam and Aaron, L.B. GreggReview from jeannie zelos book reviewsSomehow this series has missed me, its well into a run, but that not a problem, as it's very easy to follow. I loved the writing style, the dry, laconic wit dispalyed by narrator Sam, the gentle village setting and simple but friendly mockery. It's not a book full of nastiness and bitching, no huge dramatic scenes, dramas and tears, but one of clever observation and humour. Not the laugh out loud type, but the more subtle sort, such as when Sam calls Aaron the “hamburglar”. He first meets Aaron when he's in a predicament at the library, after hours and he's got his arm stuck trying to retrieve his phone from the book drop....Aaron is inside the library. Sam knows he's a stranger and not supposed to be there, but somehow Aaron isn't stealing, he's full of excuses and mamages to avoid trouble. IBM a great inro to the nature of both of them. Sam then finds Aaron is a guest in their B&B, the heritage he runs with sister Wynne. It's one of those villages where everyone knows everything almost before it happens. Somehow poor Sam seems to be on the short end of the stick every time...Wynne's cooking/dating lessons were such fun, I loved those and they provided the backbone for so much humour and so much village information. Sam's determined to find out why Aaron is there but failing, he seems to skirt the law and yet nothing happens. It doesn't help that there's a strong attraction between them, and many of their encounters end in an amourous and sensual way – the church scene – oh I could just imagine poor Sam's reaction. He's a great man, 28, looks after sister Wynne and tries to keep the B&B in profit, he's Mr conventional, Mr never stick out from the norm. I feel he's a seething mass of frustration inside with his map of all the places he wants to go, but he's too much sense of responsibility to just abandon Wynne and travel...then he meets Aaron and all his perceptions and beliefs are challenged. As well as the humour and romance there's a mystery to solve, and no I didn't work it out til the end...I loved this book, would happily re read it and love to read more from the Men of Smithfield. Stars: Five – great read. ARC supplied via Netgalley.
Do You like book Sam And Aaron (2014)?
Humour mystery and romance.Not a bad read but this seems to b a lukewarm series as a whole
—Chris
Loved Sam and Aaron, and the shenanigans they get up to in Church still has me cracking up
—KawaiiKitsune93
This book was reviewed by Love Bytes Reviews!
—Islander21