Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Snow Angels In the Dust Review #GayBookPromotions

NEW RELEASE

Book Title: Snow Angels in the Dust

Author and Publisher: Kristoffer Gair

Cover Artist: Kris Norris

Release Date: August 27, 2024

Genre: LGBT, Romance

Tropes: Quest, Fated Mates

Themes: Forgiveness, Fate, Asian culture

Heat Rating: One sex scene/ 4 out of 5 flames.

Length:  73 000 words/ 336 pages

It is its own self-contained story,

but features characters from Butterflies I Have Known, and Falling Awake III: Requiem. 

It does not end on a cliffhanger

Goodreads 

Buy Links

Amazon US   |   Amazon UK 

Barnes & Noble (Print Copies) 

As it should be. As it needs to be. As it was meant to be.

Blurb

“I have one more job for you.”

Milton Glass, an award-winning photojournalist, celebrated worldwide as one of the greatest documentarians of the twentieth century, has passed. However, he leaves an unfinished task for personal assistant Cristian Orr (Butterflies I Have Known): discover the fate of a soldier’s child who’d been born and abandoned during the Vietnam War.

Cristian hesitates to get involved until an even greater mystery presents itself in the form of a name uttered over thirty years earlier by a comatose man on the other side of the world.

A name no one there could possibly know.

In an unfamiliar country and completely out of his element, Cristian must uncover the life of a man born of two cultures, accepted by neither, and the man’s connection to the whispered name.

The answers draw Cristian into a personal journey unlike anything he’s experienced before, towards a fate two lifetimes in the making.

Excerpt 

Cristian powered up his laptop and plugged the thumb drive into the side of the machine. A single file folder contained a lone video file. He double-clicked on the icon.

Mr. Glass's face appeared on the screen.

“Hello, Cristian. I'm sorry I'm not there to discuss this with you in person. I'd hoped to be, only, as you may have guessed from our time together, things don't always go to plan. Still, I have no complaints. I lived a very full life, and you played a part in helping me right a wrong after seventy years of searching. I won't forget that, your kindness, or you.

“But there's another wrong out there, one I wasn't able to help right, and I believe you can. So, I have one more job for you. A veteran contacted me a couple of weeks ago. You'll find copies of his correspondences and my replies in the box Rebecca provided you, along with other documentation you’ll need. You’ll forgive me for presuming you’ll continue on with this, but I figure if you came this far, I’ve piqued your interest.

“The man who contacted me is one of perhaps tens of thousands who fought in Vietnam and fathered children there. Some of these servicemen died in the line of duty, got injured and sent home, or left and abandoned the women they were with, as well as the children born to them. Some of these families reunited—though most didn’t—and some hoped word would never reach home because of what an illegitimate child could mean for them and their families back here in the States, let alone an illegitimate Asian child. It was a different time, Cristian, and while that doesn't excuse anything, the circumstances do help with understanding the situation.

“Master Sergeant Dale L. Ricci wrote to me and asked for my help in finding out what happened to one such child—his child. Dale left before the birth of his son and, because he had a girlfriend waiting for him back home who he married shortly after returning, he never contacted his son or former girlfriend. The mother of his child, Hai Anh, tried many times to reach him based on what little information she had. Her letters went unanswered. Dale received them and made the choice not to reply.

“The letters stopped for a good many years, then the Army base where he'd been stationed reached out to him. Hai Anh desperately tried to get word to Dale. Their son, then twenty-two, had been severely beaten, was in and out of a coma, and might not live. She pleaded with Dale to come and at least see their son once with his own eyes in case he never woke up again. This happened thirty-two years ago.

“Dale never went, and this decision has haunted him ever since. He already felt guilty enough abandoning them, but to not go in what might have been a matter of life or death, especially knowing how the children of these GIs were treated? Still, he kept his silence. His wife recently passed, and he now wants to know what happened. He wants to know if his son’s life continued, or if it ended.

“Yes, it's guilt, but it’s also about mortality. Dale himself has recently been diagnosed with terminal cancer. He doesn't want to pass without knowing the truth, for better or worse. You once confided in me that your roommate taught you to speak Vietnamese during your college years, and you consider it your hidden talent. It need not remain hidden anymore.

“I chose you to work for me, Cristian, because your research and project management skills are second to none. You're discreet, you have great instincts, and aren't afraid to act on those instincts. I need your discretion and great instincts now. Not for Dale, though he will most assuredly benefit from your skills, but rather for you. There is a mystery here in what happened to his child, but an even greater mystery for you to solve, and one I feel you will recognize when you see it.”

Mr. Glass paused, then stared into the laptop’s camera as if Cristian truly sat in front of him and not a computer, and his former employer’s face softened. The hair on Cristian’s arms stood up.

“I wouldn't ask this of you if I didn't feel it important. You helped me, and even though I'm gone now, I want to help you. You know I believe some things are simply meant to be, and this is one of them. A thread from your life here is intertwined with lives over there…

“Take care of yourself, Cristian. I know you’re not fond of taking chances, but I’m asking you to take one now. Your future is out there waiting for you.”

The picture turned black as Mr. Glass clicked the button to end recording.


Free use image from Open Clipart Vectors

Ornery Owl's Review

Rating: Five out of Five Stars

Fans of the fated mates trope may appreciate this book. However, the story involves reincarnation rather than shifters. It is a well-written tale about two lost souls discovering each other after many years of feeling alienated, each for his own reason.

Cristian is a consummate professional who is comfortable taking on assignments that send him all over the world because he does not allow himself to form attachments to anyone. His family rejected him because of his homosexuality. His closest bond was to his employer, the celebrated photojournalist Milton Glass. When Milton passes away, he leaves one final assignment for Cristian. 

Xuan is the son of a Vietnamese woman whose male relatives will stop at nothing to preserve their family's honor and an Amerasian man murdered by those relatives after she becomes pregnant. Xuan's mother gave him up for adoption after he was born to protect him from her father and brothers, who wanted him dead.

The first part of the story is told from Cristian's perspective. We don't meet Xuan until later in the story. Cristian has vivid dreams involving a mysterious friend and a landscape he has never seen but is as real to him as anything he has ever known in his waking life.

The book addresses an issue from the Vietnam War era that is seldom discussed. Soldiers sometimes had children with Vietnamese women and then left those children and their mothers behind when the war ended. Some of these children were sent to the United States for adoption. Those who remained in Vietnam were shunned and seen as reminders of the invaders from overseas. 

Being born in 1965 in the United States, I knew a few Vietnamese or mixed-race children who had been adopted by American families. I couldn't imagine being unkind to them. I knew some people were. I honestly didn't know about the prejudices the children of American soldiers and Vietnamese women remaining in Vietnam were subjected to. 

From what I've learned, the United States would prefer to forget the Vietnam War ever happened. Those who don't know their history are doomed to repeat it. I applaud the author for illuminating a problematic historical period that tends not to be discussed in classrooms. 

Those who like reading stories that tackle complex social issues will appreciate this story as long as they also like or don't mind the reincarnation and fated mates angles. While violent occurrences are discussed, they aren't described in detail. 

The book is suitable only for readers 18 and older because it contains an explicit consensual sex scene, a fair bit of crude language, and adult subject matter.

I was deeply touched by this thoughtful, well-written story, and I would like to read more from the author.

About the Author 

Kristoffer Gair grew up in Fraser, MI and is a graduate of Grand Valley State University.

He currently lives in a suburb of Detroit.

Author Links

Blog/Website  |   Facebook  |   Twitter  |  Instagram

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