Disclaimer: I'm not the author.
Author: Skye Kilaen
Links:
Amazon,
Goodreads Summary:
A polyamorous romance about building a new life after the world falls apart.
Life in rural Colorado fifteen years after the second U.S. Civil War is perilous. Van and his girlfriend Hadas only recovered from the attack that killed Van’s wife because their community helped them heal. The warmth Van and Hadas share isn’t the love he lost, but it’s precious. He’s content.
Clark survived the war, but his family fractured and now his relationships are in ruins... which must be his fault, or everyone wouldn’t say so. Figuring he can’t destroy ties he doesn’t create, he relocates to start over, zero interpersonal complications welcome.
When Van and Clark meet, though, it’s nothing but complicated. Clark can’t stop wanting quiet, loyal Van no matter how the electricity between them misfires, and Van craves more than hookups from the charismatic newcomer. Hadas and others start coaxing Clark out of his emotional isolation, but when violence threatens the town, Van and Hadas must leave him behind to defend it.
To bring them safely home, Clark must decide whether Van’s love, Hadas’s friendship, and the belonging he’s found are enough to overcome his fear of once again letting down those he cares about.
A high heat, hurt-comfort, post-collapse M/M romance novel with D/s elements, polyamory, open relationships, and a guaranteed HEA. Full content warnings are available on the author’s website for those who need them: skyewritesromance.com
Available in: Kindle
Genres: post-apocalyptic, m/m/f
Notes about book/series: I don't read a lot of post-apocalyptic fiction, but this one is pretty quiet, which is more to my taste. There are some bandit attacks, but it's also about living in the countryside with limited technology, taking care of animals and crops...
There is m/m/f in a V formation, plus some other m/m branches. The main m/m pairing has some light D/s, but there's not too much explicit content.
People introduce themselves with their pronouns. There's a non-binary character, with they/them pronouns.