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Unfit to Print by K.J. Charles
Unfit to Print by K.J. Charles











He captured that stiff British upper class to perfection, but he also managed to portray the more femme and swishy Daniel da Silva. Tom Carter narrated this book really well. It was all portrayed quite believably, it wasn’t overdone but fit the era, as did the ending – their beginning. Another thing that I enjoyed was Curtis coming to terms with who he was, his sexuality, and accepting it. It was kind of fun to watch Curtis flounder a bit when da Silva got under his skin. What they find is a tale of blackmail and murder and more danger than either of them expected. After all one can hardly expect a gentleman from the army to have anything in common with the femme and limp wristed man with questionable morals, now can you? That is until he catches the poet breaking into the same library as he, and just maybe they are after the same information. While a guest, he meets Daniel da Silva, a queer poet that ruffles all Curtis’s proper feathers. His search leads him far into the country, and a very modern, but isolated country house.

Unfit to Print by K.J. Charles

Determined to get to the bottom of it all and make the responsible party pay – if indeed there was a guilty party, he starts to investigate. All due to a batch of malfunctioning guns. Two years ago Captain Archie Curtis’s life changed, he lost his fingers, his friends and fellow soldiers along with his military career.

Unfit to Print by K.J. Charles

So said and done, Think of England and I were going on a date. I then realized there was a whole new genre for me to explore! And word on the block is that KJ Charles is the one to read for this genre. They just never really called my name – that is until I picked up Robby Riverton: Mail Order Bride a couple of months ago.

Unfit to Print by K.J. Charles

I haven’t read many historical m/m romances – a handful if even that really.

Unfit to Print by K.J. Charles

Warning: Contains explicit male/male encounters, ghastly historical attitudes, and some extremely stiff upper lips. And there's something else they share - a mounting sexual tension that leaves Curtis reeling.Īs the house party's elegant facade cracks to reveal treachery, blackmail, and murder, Curtis finds himself needing clever, dark-eyed Daniel as he has never needed a man before. Effete, decadent, foreign, and all-too-obviously queer, the sophisticated poet is everything the straightforward British officer fears and distrusts.Īs events unfold, Curtis realizes that Daniel has his own secret intentions. Alone, purposeless, and angry, Curtis is determined to discover if he and his comrades were the victims of fate, or of sabotage.Ĭurtis's search takes him to an isolated, ultra-modern country house, where he meets and instantly clashes with fellow guest Daniel da Silva. Two years ago, Captain Archie Curtis lost his friends, fingers, and future to a terrible military accident.













Unfit to Print by K.J. Charles