Cover Image: The Love Song of Sawyer Bell

The Love Song of Sawyer Bell

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This book is an inner journey of a young student of classical music that, overwhelmed by the competitiveness of the university in which he studies, joins a music band to do a summer tour. Sawyer, this girl, at the same time has doubts about her sexuality. By joining the band, she discovers what she is really lacking in her life and the experiences she lives during this trip help her face her future. I really liked the naturalness with which these two girls live and enjoy sex. And the growth of the relationship between them has also seemed well paced and sweet to me. An interesting and entertaining read.

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I'm such a sucker for books with healthy romances and communication and this book gave me that and more. If you're looking for a book that's about music, art, friendship and love, this is the one for you. We have this adorable f/f power couple that will make you want a girlfriend asap. They're together for most of the book and I was extremely happy to see that the characters, the conflict and the relationship felt realistic. Maybe a band tour isn't exactly something that happens all the time but the talks that they had and the problems and feelings that they experienced definitely were something that you can see in every day life. They were truly adorable and relatable and I got very attached to them. Vix is bisexual and the things that she said and the bullshit that she had to deal with the preconceptions and stereotypes she confronted resonated with me a lot. It was also very important to see Sawyer's journey accepting the different aspects of herself and changes in her life.

I absolutely adored the passion that they had for their music and the fight for playing and doing what made them happy in their lives. I liked that Vix and other characters constantly called out sexism and homo/biphobia but also things like the gender binary and I love how Vix said that being bisexual doesn't mean that there are only two genders or that they are based on the genitals. I thought all those discussions added a lot to the plot and it felt like a very feminist book. Sawyer and Vix were very different but both had very rounded and multifaceted personalities that made them flawed but also extremely likeable. Even though Vix was more outspoken and open, they were both very strong characters in their own ways. I also adored the humor in this book. Sawyer's jokes are jokes I would make. Also, I adored how realistic the sex was. I think I've never read sex scenes this well written and constructed. The sex wasn't always the same, they played and experimented with different things until they found what they liked to do and how they liked to do it. They were very open and communicative and that made their relationship super healthy and fun to read.

There were a few things that I didn't like that prevented me to give it a higher rating. There was a anorgasmistic comment (I think that's what it's called, right?) where Sawyer basically said that if she didn't have an orgasm, she was defective. She said "'What if you can't get me off, either?' What if she was defective?". There were also mentions of "girl sex" as sex between two people with vaginas and also "lesbian sex" even though there was a bi girl in the relationship. There was also a lot of other queer characters but I thought they didn't have much of a personality outside of a few interactions that they had. There was an asexual character that literally had like two lines and no distinguishable personality and that made me feel that he was there just to have an ace character but I can't tell you anything about him besides that. Even though there were talks about gender and sexuality, the conversations felt very cis-centered. Other than those things (that felt very secondary because the book in general had great messages) this book was wonderful and I would highly recommend it!

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Received this ARC from Netgalley and Riptide Publishing for an honest review.

I enjoyed the concept of the book and since I play or try to play Violine myself I enjoyed that aspect and that it had a big role in the story. However, I just didn’t get the chemistry between them - there was none for me and I felt the whole time that Vix kind of too advantage of Sawyer and played with her a little. The sex scenes were a kind of awkward and strange. I mean you are sharing a hotel room and supposedly both can’t wait to sleep with each other and then you take a way long shower? I understand wanting to take a shower and everything but that long?
It just felt strange too me and I couldn’t really get into the story.

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The Love Song of Sawyer Bell is a story about love, taking risks, and finding out who you are and what makes you happy. Sawyer is a Juilliard trained violinist, but she’s not happy, not socially and not musically. It is only when she meets Vix and her bandmates that Swayer’s music comes alive, and with it, her life…she’s happy and finds love.
The characters are well developed with realistic dialogue and setting that allows the reader to become engaged in this story. A very good read!

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I can safely say this is my favourite book by Avon Gale yet. It has the best writing (her writing in general has improved immensely from the first book of hers I read), and narrowly the best couple. Though that's a harder one to judge, because they all have such good dynamics and are consistently healthy relationships. Probably what edges it for me on that front is that I was smiling throughout their interactions because they were genuinely funny and sweet.

Possibly the only issue with this I had was that the angst felt quite contrived (and also somewhat unnecessary), and as per usual it was relationship based angst. But given that the likelihood of angst in a new adult book being relationship based is about 99%, I guess it's something I should have been expecting.

Nice to see though was that Sawyer's biphobic stereotyping (although unintentional) was called out and corrected.

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Pure fluffy romance. The characters are fun and believable, the sex scenes are adorable, funny, and sweet, and the conflict is basically non-existent and easily resolved. Basically a chocolate bar in book form.

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A good story. Read it in two days. Enjoyed the characters and the story.

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I've read a lot of m/m romance, many by this author so it was great to read this sweet and lovely f/f love story.

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I've wanted to read this book since I first saw it - June 13 2017 - listed as 'upcoming' (or whatever it is Riptide calls their books that'll appear sometime in the future). The book looked super interesting.

Right, were was I? Oh, yeah. I've wanted to read this book for four months now. But, there's a certain worry that develops, of course, when you are in that situation. Both in wanting to read a book, and in noticing that the book is in one of those mixed gender series (heh, that sounds weird, I meant FF books with MM books, with occasional MF mixed in with one or the other or both being transgender; plus, to ruin that use of 'both' that started this sentence, I kind of have a hate/love relationship with books related to music).

So - to recap this brilliant part of the review: 1) wanted to read this book long time; 2) some worry based on that and other things.

The book: Victoria “Vix” Vincent is about . . . oh, 25 or 26 years of age (she was a high school senior when the other main character, Sawyer Bell, was a freshman in high school, which, in most USA high schools, would make them 3 to 4 years apart in age (some high schools merge junior high and high school into one school, so there'd be a 5 to 6 year gap between the lowest level and top, but I don't think that's the case here). Gah. Let's try this again.

Vix Vincent is a 25/26 year old professional musician with a band named after herself. She's had this band for years now, about 8 at least (maybe ten, there was a comment that she's been performing since she was 16, though I don't think that literally meant the band is that old). The band has gotten a certain reputation, but it is nowhere near the top. Or even, really, the middle. But they are slowly inching up. Playing larger venues. Headlining . . . sometimes - sometimes performing as the opening band. All of this is important because the band is just about to go on the road again, in about 2 weeks. Basically for the summer. But their fiddle player went and got himself married and then got himself a baby to look after and is, therefore, taking time away from the band (maybe/probably permanently). So - they need a new fiddle player. Which is where the book opens, with Vix and her bandmates watching poor performer after poor performer play one after the other. And getting super depressed. Then another one appears, wearing a sundress and looking, maybe, 16 (actually, not sure how young she looked, but they did ask if she was old enough to be there).

That next up auditioning for the band is/was Sawyer Bell. Fiddler/Violinist. She looks real young (I'm probably overdoing that part), and when she talks - it's in a light barely heard whisper. The band kind of groans, but wave her on to perform. Which she does. She plays something classical. With authority. Blows away the band members with how good she plays. They try to trip her up by throwing out some band names and asking her to play something less classical, more rock; and she does. Masterfully. She, Sawyer, then mentions that she's a student at Juilliard, in between Junior and Senior years at college. One thing leads to another, and the 21 year old is a member of the band for the summer. Oh, and for those reading along, she also has her point of view presented.

There's one flashback in this book, occurs roughly about where we are information wise (near the beginning of the book; actually, that '7 years earlier' might have occurred twice in rapid succession - seeming as if one flashback). The flashback takes us back 7 years when both Sawyer and Vix were in high school. And show us readers that Vix and Sawyer had actually meet before, once, back in high school.

There's much humor, travel adventures, and 'getting to know you' explorations of a romantic nature. Oh, and sex, graphic in nature. And quite fun for me personally to read - since there was so much humor mixed in to those scenes. I like humor; I like the mix of humor and sex. Fun times.

Right, so - book is outstanding from beginning until the ever present need for conflict rears its ugly head and erupts in conflict. Um, poorly worded. Well, no matter. Conflict point was reached. Things got rough, this is a romance book though, not a tragedy, so . . ..

Great, super readable, enjoyable book. 99.9% of the time I really liked the two main characters, Vix and Sawyer (not 100% sure I particularly liked the others who popped up - like there's just something dislikable about Jeff (bandmate), and about Sawyer's parents (mostly the father and the jokes he was cracking during an emotional moment).

Rating: 4.88

September 20 2017

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