Jude was the typical I-can-do-it-on-my-own Alaskan tourist who wandered off on his own when he didn’t know anything about snowy landscapes or camping or Alaska. Hutch was the silent but dangerous cabin hermit who enjoyed his time alone more than his time with others, but despite his solitary lifestyle he still lent a helping hand to Jude when he saw that he was in a bit of a pickle. I was beyond impressed and extremely happy when I read this book that Alaska was portrayed correctly because for the most part, Alaska isn’t secluded cabins. But I should have known that this was going to be good, because Eli Easton is just a really good author. So one of my biggest pet peeves is when people depict AK to be some ridiculous barren snowy desert. But is Jude what he claims to be? Or is he entangled in the secrets Hutch moved to Alaska to escape?Ĥ.5/5 – Being an Alaskan, I had high hopes for this book. By the time the storm clears, Hutch finds himself a little too attached to Jude Devereaux, San Francisco-based male model. Two gay men snowed in for three days – things happen. The problem is Jude isn’t just gorgeous, he’s funny and smart and flirtatious. But Hutch is a suspicious SOB and treats his unwanted guest warily. Jude says he’s in the area for a ski trip and that he fled a domineering lover, thinking he could make it into town. The latest snowstorm carries something unexpected to the doorstep of Hutch’s secluded Alaskan cabin: a stranger named Jude, the most beautiful man Hutch has ever seen.
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