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TELL ME THAT YOU LOVE ME
Posted by Literary Titan


In Tell Me That You Love Me, Connie Roberts narrates a restless, decade-tinged search for tenderness that keeps slipping into sex, friendship, and misread need, moving between New York City, Charleston, Fire Island, and Key West as the story escalates from raw erotic entanglements to genuine catastrophe. What begins as Connie’s attempt to reinvent herself and be chosen becomes a harsher education in how people use each other, how shame masks longing, and how “love” can be mistaken for the simple relief of being wanted.
This book doesn’t flirt with discomfort, it really commits. The eroticism is frequently charged, sometimes tender, and sometimes poisoned by power games and crossed boundaries; there’s an argument over “who did what to whom” that lands with a sour aftertaste because it’s played like banter while still naming rape outright. That tonal whiplash, sensuality set beside psychic bruising, feels deliberate, a reminder that harm often arrives in familiar voices, even in rooms that look safe.
And then the plot turns viciously public. On Fire Island, the story’s social sparkle (tea dances, beaches, the magnetic churn of summer bodies) is split by sudden violence: Connie learns that her friend Darin has been shot and is dead, rumors detonating faster than facts, police looming at the edges of the party. The murder isn’t used as a gimmick; it changes the temperature of everything, exposing how quickly a chosen family can become a crime scene, how fear rearranges loyalties, how the self tries to sprint away from grief. By the time the book reaches its late stretch, it’s no longer asking “Will she be loved?” so much as “What kind of love can survive the world she’s already lived?”
Readers who want erotic romance, dark romance, and emotional romantic suspense, especially stories that braid sex with queer-adjacent nightlife, messy friendship, and genuinely disturbing turns, are the best fit here (with a clear content-warning mindset for sexual violence and murder). If you’ve enjoyed the big-feelings sweep and relationship labyrinths of Taylor Jenkins Reid’s The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo, this delivers a grittier, less polished cousin: more bruises, fewer soft-focus edges. The last pages in Key West widen into something like grace: a sail into the sunset, a rare “green flash” called a lucky omen, and Connie, finally, naming her love as improbable but real, choosing to believe she and Bill were “destined to be together.” Tell Me That You Love Me is a jagged, sensual novel that earns its ending by refusing to pretend the dark parts didn’t happen.
Pages: 411 | ASIN : B0FBY5KNSH
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Contemporary American Fiction, David Rogers, ebook, gay fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, LGBTQ+, LGBTQ+ Erotica, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, TELL ME THAT YOU LOVE ME, writer, writing



