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The bromance book club  Cover Image Book Book

The bromance book club / Lyssa Kay Adams.

Adams, Lyssa Kay, (author.).

Summary:

The first rule of book club: You don't talk about book club.Nashville Legends second baseman Gavin Scott's marriage is in major league trouble. He’s recently discovered a humiliating secret: his wife Thea has always faked the Big O. When he loses his cool at the revelation, it’s the final straw on their already strained relationship. Thea asks for a divorce, and Gavin realizes he’s let his pride and fear get the better of him. Welcome to the Bromance Book Club.Distraught and desperate, Gavin finds help from an unlikely source: a secret romance book club made up of Nashville's top alpha men. With the help of their current read, a steamy Regency titled Courting the Countess, the guys coach Gavin on saving his marriage. But it'll take a lot more than flowery words and grand gestures for this hapless Romeo to find his inner hero and win back the trust of his wife.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781984806093
  • Physical Description: viii, 339 pages ; 21 cm
  • Publisher: New York : Jove, 2019
Subject: Book clubs (Discussion groups) > Fiction.
Baseball players > Fiction.
Man-woman relationships > Fiction.
Male friendship > Fiction.
Marriage > Fiction.
Marital conflict > Fiction.
Sports stories
Nashville (Tennesse) > Fiction.
Genre: Humorous fiction.
Sports fiction.
Romance fiction.
Domestic fiction.
Humorous fiction.

Available copies

  • 7 of 8 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Prince Rupert Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 8 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Prince Rupert Library Adam (Text) 33294002073286 Adult Fiction - Second Floor Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2019 September #2
    Professional baseball player Gavin wants another chance with his wife, Thea, after she kicked him out of the house. She feels as though she's disappearing, between caring for their twin daughters on her own, and dealing with the expectations of the other team members' wives and girlfriends. Three Nashville Legend players sit Gavin down and convince him to face difficult and embarrassing truths about how he has ignored his wife's needs, including her sexual fulfillment. They reveal that they have found the perfect way to learn what women really want: read romance novels. They bring Gavin into their secret club so he can start over and successfully court his wife. There's plenty of humor in Adams' modern take on Cyrano de Bergerac, though both Gavin and Thea have to acknowledge their past mistakes and make changes before they can move forward. The supporting cast is as interesting as the struggling couple, including their precocious daughters, Thea's sister, and Gavin's clever friends. Readers will look forward to more books in the Bromance Book Club series after this promising start. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2020 August
    The Hold List: For anyone who's ever brought a book to a ballgame

    Since most live sports are on hold this year, it's book lovers' time to shine. Whether you need something to fill the gaping hole left by cheering stadiums or just a fun read to go with your Sunday afternoon buffalo dip, these books are all winners.


    We Ride Upon Sticks

    Campy and surreal, Quan Barry's second novel follows a high school field hockey team that's desperate for a winning season—desperate enough to make a deal with the devil. All 11 Lady Falcons solemnly pledge their oath to the forces of darkness, signing a notebook emblazoned with an image of Emilio Estevez (did I mention this book takes place in 1989?). Of course, it's not the first time such a deal has been struck in Danvers, Massachusetts, which is just a stone's throw away from Salem, of witch trial fame. But as the devil's demands increase along with the powers of the team, things begin to get complicated. Barry uses the first-­person plural "we" to narrate the book, a choice that emphasizes the unity and collective force of the team. Full of dark humor and pitch-perfect 1980s details, We Ride Upon Sticks will appeal to anyone who's ever put it all on the line to win.

    —Trisha, Publisher


    The Bromance Book Club

    If you'd prefer your books to be light on the sports and heavy on the romance, then Lyssa Kay Adams' hilarious debut, The Bromance Book Club, is the book for you. When Major League Baseball player Gavin Scott's marriage to Thea seems on the verge of collapse, his friends introduce him to their secret book club—which reads romance novels and only romance novels. What follows is an absolute joy of a romantic comedy as the club's members try to convert Gavin to their love of the genre, pointing out all the ways in which reading romance can not only help him save his marriage but also help men empathize more fully with women. The zany goings-on (just wait until you meet "The Russian") never overshadow the poignancy of Gavin's devotion to doing the hard work to save his relationship.

    —Savanna, Associate Editor


    Sudden Death

    I'm not sure if a more bizarre sports novel exists, but I've always wanted a reason to recommend Álvaro Enrigue's bawdy tennis novel, so here we go. What begins as a 16th-century tennis match between Spanish poet Francisco de Quevedo and Italian painter Caravaggio fractures into a far-flung historical stream of consciousness, bouncing from scenes with Hernán Cortés or Galileo to emails with the book's editor and then back to the court, where Quevedo and Caravaggio, both hungover, are volleying a ball made of Anne Boleyn's hair. In between points, Enrigue's metafictive tale (brilliantly translated by Natasha Wimmer) lampoons the Spanish conquest of Mexico, treats not one historical figure with anything resembling preciousness and positively revels in violence, beheadings and the like. It's a postmodern riot; advantage, Enrigue.

    —Cat, Deputy Editor


    The Throwback Special

    Chris Bachelder's The Throwback Special is the only football novel I could ever love. Though it's technically about a group of men who convene once a year to reenact the November 1985 "Monday Night Football" game in which Joe Theismann's leg was brutally snapped in two, it's not really about that at all. (Believe me—if it were, I wouldn't read it.) Bachelder takes readers into the minds of 22 adult men and dissects their fears, failures, grievances and qualms with exacting humor. Fatherhood, marriage, middle age and masculinity—things with which I have no firsthand experience—are explored with such bizarre compassion that I absolutely could not look away. Don't let a lack of football fanaticism keep you away from this gem of a book. Dare to peek into the male psyche, and have a good-natured laugh at what you find.

    —Christy, Associate Editor


    Rammer Jammer Yellow Hammer

    I'm going to make what feels like a bold claim: Warren St. John's Rammer Jammer Yellow Hammer is a book you'll love whether you relish screaming at your television for three hours each weekend or you can't explain the difference between a third down and a third inning. Football knowledge isn't a prerequisite to enjoying this story of how St. John embedded himself in an RV-­driving stampede of Alabama Crimson Tide fans for a season, because he didn't write a book about football. What he wrote is a love story about a group of people, brought together by a common purpose and shared devotion to one of the winningest teams in college football history. It's an affectionate and often erudite glimpse into the ways love can drive us all to madness. Speaking of: Roll Tide. 

    —Stephanie, Associate Editor

    Copyright 2020 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2019 September #1
    A baseball player attempts to heal his marriage with the help of his team's romance-novel book club. Gavin Scott has it all—a killer baseball career, twin daughters, and a devoted wife. But when Gavin discovers that Thea has been faking it in the bedroom, he's distraught. The two have a blowup fight that ends with Gavin moving out and Thea asking for a divorce. Thea, however, has been faking it in more ways than one—even though she's painting the picture of a happy baseball wife, she's actually miserable in that role and wishes she could go back to school and pursue art. Between Gavin's busy career and their young children, he hasn't even noticed how unhappy she is, and she has no plans to tell him. When Gavin confides in his teammates that his marriage is in trouble, their advice comes from an unconventional source: romance novels, specifically Regency romances full of lords and countesses. Gavin is skeptical, but his teammates persist—the books help them understand what their wives are thinking and learn how to verbalize their feelings. Feeling desperate, Gavin decides to give them a chance, starting with a book called Courting the Countess. Surprisingly, the advice from his friends works—but what will Gavin do when he has to stop using the romance novel's words and start using his own? Adams creates a refreshingly open group of male friends who talk about emotional labor, toxic masculinity, and how pumpkin spice lattes and romance novels are mocked because women like them. They're also, however, hilariously and believably crude (case in point: a running joke involves one of Gavin's teammate's "digestive problems"). Alternating between Gavin's and Thea's points of view, Adams never paints either character as the villain, instead pointing out how both spouses' lack of communication led to their current predicament. Also included are passages from Courting the Countess, a detail sure to please historical romance fans. Gavin and Thea's story begins at such a low point that it's hard to imagine how they'll ever fall back i n love, but their reconciliation is built so slowly and realistically that readers will be rooting for their happily-ever-after. A fun, sexy, and heartfelt love story that's equal parts romance and bromance. Copyright Kirkus 2019 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2019 July #4

    In this heartfelt romance, a professional baseball player fights to save his failing marriage with the help of some good friends and the inspirational exploits of a fictional nobleman. When Nashville Legends second baseman Gavin Scott's wife, Thea, informs him not only that she wants a divorce but that she has been faking orgasms for the three years of their marriage, he's devastated. Macho man Gavin is just desperate enough to take the advice of a secret book club made up of other athletes and powerful men who get relationship tips from romance novels. They instruct him to use a Regency romance, Courting the Countess, as a blueprint for starting over and wooing his wife properly. Gavin and Thea rekindle their relationship, one chapter at a time, while working through their individual issues. Adams (Seventh Inning Heat) weaves in humor, complex emotions, and excerpts from the motivational story itself to create a satisfying courtship. A strong supporting cast, including Gavin's book clubmates and his tiny, adorable twin daughters, helps flesh out the Legends community. This earnest charmer is sure to win Adams new fans. Agent: Tara Gelsomino, One Track Literary. (Nov.)

    Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.

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