Welcome to romancewithaplot, a cozy corner where I share my journey through reading mm romance where stories matter.
You'll find here, book reviews and recommendations about MM books:
š plot with intention,
š romance that shapes the characters,
šæ comfort and emotional safety,
š yearning and š„ spice that serves the story
This story is
devastatingly beautiful,
heartbreaking,
and feels horrifyingly personal.
Andrew, Thomas, and Dove, once an inseparable trio, begin their senior year in bording school, carrying the pieces of what's left of them after an unexplained, but terrible, unnamed thing shattered what they once were.
Andrew now more isolated than ever, even from his twin sister, who used to be his comfort and closest companion. Now he is left to survive senior year while battling anxiety and the gruesome thoughts that haunt his mind and the halls of the school mannor. Only Thomas remains by his side, his best friend, the boy he secretly loves, and the one now under suspicion after his parentsā disappearance.
They find themselves fighting monsters bone-deep into the woods every night. But the worst monsters may not be the ones lurking in the forest. They may be the everyday horrors of loneliness, fear, hunger, anger, violence, and grief.
This book is surely to leave you wondering where fiction ends and reality begins.
For it, With it, Never Against it
(When the Tides Held the Moon)
by. Venessa Vida Kelley
āāāāā
Benny doesn't belong anywhere.
Not fully in this new city.
Not fully with other immigrants.
Not even fully within himself at the beginning of this story.
He's a Puerto Rican immigrant in New York. He feels isolated from this new world that rejects him for being brown, and isolated from other immigrants for being queer. He doesn't belong anywhere.
Until he does.
In a group of misfits. Rejected souls. Shared trauma and survival.
"For it, with it, never against it"
The kind of found family?I hadn't read since Green Creek.
And then, there's Rio.
The quiet moments between Beny and Rio are some of the most special parts of this story. Them making music together, literally and metaphorically, is a thread that runs so beautifully through the book.
Their connection builds slowly.
Survival.
Friendship.
Trust.
Safety.
Then something deeper.
Kisses read meaningful.
Love-making emotionally grounded while supernatural
You don't sit and question the mechanic. You just feel it. It makes sense, it feels intimate. The book isn't witholding by keeping certain moments closed door, it pulls you into the emotional core instead.
Benny's growth follows his connection with Rio and his new found family. Each character revealing a new layer of this world.
The last stage of Benny's growth happens when he accepts his love for Rio. It's only then he truly learns to swim.
Through Rio, he discovers a world that won't reject him, for as all of Neptune children are different and welcome.
This book spoke loud. of belonging and marginilization, of choosing your family, all while giving you a love story that feels earned.
The writing is polished, lyrical, tightly crafted, with layers of meaning, it is self reflecting, it is historically grounded.
š§ļø Still thinking about this book
š¶ļø Spice: restrained, intimate, emotionally immersive
Why The Darkness Outside Us proves MM Romance isn't niche
āIntimacy is the only shield against insanity. Intimacy, not knowledge. Intimacy, not power.ā
This book is a benchmark for this blog.
Not just as an MM romance, but as an example of why MM romance shouldnāt be treated like a niche corner of reading. The Darkness Outside Us works because it leads with story. It asks to be read as sci-fi first, tense, thoughtful, plot-driven, and lets the romance grow naturally inside that. That alone makes it a cornerstone for me, and part of why this blog exists.
At its heart, this is sci-fi. The plot is clever and tightly constructed. The story feels intimate and claustrophobic in a way that pulls you in rather than pushes you away.
The relationship isnāt there to soften the story or check a genre box. It is the reason the story works. Intimacy here isnāt a reward, itās how the characters survive.
Ambrose and Kodiak's connection makes sense in a very human way: when youāre completely alone, connection stops being optional.
One small note, their age does feel like a choice meant to frame the book as YA. Personally, the story would have worked just as well with slightly older characters, given how important the mission is. That said, it never broke my trust in the story or in their bond.
This book constantly makes you question whatās real, what youāre being told, and who actually has control. That uncertainty creates tension, and it makes every reveal hit harder. When the pain comes, it comes fast, but it never feels pointless. The pain is part of the story, and the book earns it every time, because the writer makes you care.
The MM romance label shouldn't limit who this book is for. This isnāt romance wearing a sci-fi costume. Itās sci-fi that understands these stories only matter when theyāre grounded in flawed, emotional humans. Keeping the intimacy mostly fade-to-black was the right choice, it keeps the focus on the relationship and the stakes.
These book carries a strong sense of āI would love you in any lifetimeā energy.
Iād recommend this book widely, and confidently. Itās emotionally intense, deals heavily with isolation, and humanity, and you do need to be in the right headspace. But if you want a story that proves MM romance belongs in the larger literary conversation, this one is a powerful place to start.
š Plot check: heavy, clever, essential
š« MC attachment: yes, protective, lasting
š§ After finishing: thoughtful, existential, changed
š Chaotic With a Plot
š¶ļø Spice: explicit innuendo, constant sexual humor, adult-only
š Would I reread? yes, whenever I need joy, chaos, and unfiltered nonsense
š§ neurodivergent-coded
āJust read it.ā
No reasons. Just vibes.
And listen. This book is the best book at book-ing Iāve read in a while. It is Heartfelt. Fantastic. Hilarious. All capitalized, because this book demands it.
The humor in this book is aggressively unhinged. Dick jokes everywhere. Sex is constantly on Samās mind, specifically sex-dreaming about Ryan, a knight who is engaged to the prince, poses unironically, and is apparently turned on by magic. Make of that what you will.
Once I realized this book is about the journey and not the destination, I stopped asking questions and let it take me wherever it wanted.
Somewhere I saw someone describe this book as Shrek on rainbow drugs š§š¦ and that is not only accurate, it is essential information.
Because yes:
there is magic
and wizards
and fairies (horny ones)
and a cult
and Toddās ears (if you know, you know)
and so many other surprises I refuse to spoil
Also, Sam is a magnet for trouble. And kidnapping. Truly, at this point, he should have a kidnapping subscription.
Listen. I am a full adult. I have responsibilities. And this book made me laugh so hard it hurt. Under all the chaos, this is still a story about loyalty, devotion, found family, and choosing your people, it just happens to be wrapped in nonsense, innuendo, and magical disasters.
If you think those emojis are unhinged, just wait until you see what this book does to you.
Also, you cannot convince me this book isnāt neurodivergent-coded. Itās like one-third banter, one-third sass, and one-third pure chaotic heart.
HaveHeart4Evah!!!
š« MC attachment: yes, Gary is my new spiritual animal, I mean unicorn
š§ After finishing: euphoric, delighted, slightly unwell
š Would I reread? joy reread, specially that smut scene š„
š§ļø Days to Recover
š¶ļø Spice: explicit and plot-relevant
š Would I reread? yes, when emotionally ready
The more time Iāve spent away from this book, the more I realize how much it changed me as a reader.
This has become a benchmark for me when it comes to MM romance with plot, the kind of story you donāt just finish, but sit with. It raised my expectations for what MM books can be when they fully commit to character, story, and emotional weight.
I have to talk about this book because it is, quite frankly, my Roman Empire.
I think about Harry and Iain all the time.
"I will always come back to you. Always. Even if I have to drag myself out of the grave to do it"
This is enemies to lovers done right. Not loud. Not rushed. Not performative.
A romance shaped slowly by survival, inevitability, and circumstance. Itās not a perfect book, but it tells a deeply compelling story about two flawed people from completely different worlds who become inseparable after learning how to trust each other.
Harry is earnest, stubborn, and painfully unprepared for the political chaos heās pulled into. He thinks heās clever enough to navigate it. He isnāt. Watching his world be dismantled and rebuilt is one of the most satisfying character arcs Iāve read in MM romance.
And then thereās Iain. Broody, proud, dangerous, devastatingly smart. He wears his heart too close to the surface and suffers for it, and yes, so do we. There is pain in this book, but it has meaning. The story never exploits it; it honors both the characters and the world theyāre trapped in.
This is hurt and comfort.
Love and yearning.
Desperation and hope, existing at the same time.
Not all wars are won or lost, and the ending understands that. It doesnāt go for spectacle, it goes for truth, and that choice made the story stronger.
"My ghost walks in daylight"
Right now, this book is only available on Audible while Alex de Campi finds it a new editorial. If you ever come across a print copy, grab it immediately. This is one worth holding onto.
š Plot check: strong and integral
š« MC attachment: yes, permanently
š§ After finishing: emotionally altered, thoughtful, quietly wrecked
š« Comfort Read
š§ Neurodivergency representation
š¶ļø Spice: explicit and plot-relevant
š Would I reread? absolutely ā comfort reread
"We'll never be done. Me and You, we don't have an ending"
This was my first Emmy Sanders book and immediately knew this is one of those stories Iāll come back to when I need something kind.
My heart genuinely grew while reading about Ellis and Lucky. This isnāt a loud or dramatic book. Itās gentle, patient, neurodivergent, and deeply human, the kind of story where the feelings donāt hit you all at once, but quietly settle in and stay.
"I love you more than anything. I love you, I love you, so please, my beautiful firefly, fly back to me soon"
What really worked for me is how naturally the romance is woven into the charactersā emotional journeys. Nothing feels rushed or forced. The love grows alongside trust, care, and self-understanding, which made everything feel earned. The plot isnāt flashy, but itās intentional, it gives the romance room to breathe instead of overpowering it.
This book felt like safety.
Like being seen.
If youāre in the mood for a character-driven romance with tenderness, emotional honesty, and neurodivergence representation, this one is the one for you.