I was chatting with a friend tonight on the phone and something came to my attention when we were discussing books. It seems that most of the books I have suggested she read were part of a series of MM Romance. These weren't the typical series with a different couple each book, but rather a series that focused on a couple for several books, some of the series mentioned were Kate Sherwood's Dark Horse, Lyn Gala's Aliens and Assimilation, the Chaos Station series by Jenn Burke and Kelly Jensen, JC Owens' Gaven series, and Charlie Cochet's THIRDS. The common denominator for all of these seemed to be that the authors gave the characters more than a single book to grow and develop. Much of MM Romance gives a single short (80,000 words or so) book time to develop the relationship and wrap it into a happily ever after, that these series, with multiple books devoted to the characters actually give the reader more. Everyone loves HEA books, but everyone also knows that the happily ever after is a work in progress. After a few too many shifter books with knotting and an automatic HEA, I think readers deserve in depth view of relationships and the trials that form and strengthen them. Not every series I mentioned is paranormal, but each works to detail the trials of the couple and how they overcome those obstacles. Yes, all of them include sex, but that is not a reason to automatically remove them from consideration as good books. I don't think Dex, from THIRDS, resembles Flick from Chaos Station any more than Liam resemble Gaven, and none of them resemble Dan or anyone from the Dark Horse series. There isn't a resemblance here that says these folks are filling out a form and fitting in the characters. All of them have proper motivations and all of these are explored during the course of the series, and I think what appears to be a common length restriction on MM Romance novels may actually do these authors a discredit, because the stories they write deserve to be longer, and I am pleased they take the effort to explore.
For the most part, links will be to the publisher site, but I think all are available on Amazon.
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