Fight Me Daddy (Mafia Daddies #2) Paperback

$14.99

Fight me Daddy is a full-length MM Daddy romance with morally gray characters, a devilish and demanding Daddy, an upright and cold boy, a load of bloody violence and a well-deserved HEA.

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Fight Me Daddy (Mafia Daddies #2) Paperback

I hate the mafia.

Mountains of debt that never go away, strange men in suits with guns, whispered threats in the backroom. That’s what my life has become. I told my father to never get tangled up with the Bianchi’s, but he would do anything to save the gym his grandfather started. I thought I could handle it.

Until my father takes off.

Now I’m stuck with his debt and Gabriele. The a-hole says I belong to him now until I’ve worked off every cent. If I want to keep my beloved family gym I have no choice but to obey. But as Gabriele Bianchi’s demands keep growing I realize I’m becoming the one thing I hate. I refuse to back down to this man and become his obedient little pet.

But this is one fight I’m not sure I can win.

Break Me Daddy is the second book in the series Mafia Daddies.

Looking for more BL/MM novels? Check our hand-picked choices here.

 

What is yaoi?

Yaoi, also known as Boys Love (BL) or shonen-ai, is a media genre depicting romantic and homoerotic relationships between males. It blossomed in Japan in the ’70s as a literary genre. When originally consisted of derivative works developing from parodies of original anime and manga stories. However, it gradually became an umbrella term for other forms of fiction, such as anime, movies, dramas, and fan works, featuring homosexual relationships.

The Fujoshi/Fudanshi Fandom

Fujoshi (腐女子) refers to the female yaoi fandom that emerged in the early 2000s among manga and anime fans in the online community. Fujoshi can be loosely translated as ‘rotten girl’. So the use of ‘rotten’ in a self-deprecating manner, because it symbolizes the somehow immoral or inappropriateness of the genre in mainstream culture. In conclusion, women who take pleasure in consuming media depicting sexual and romantic relationships between men. 

Despite most fujoshi being heterosexual young women, the fandom is diverse and includes people of all genders, ages, and sexualities. Male fans are called fudanshi, meaning ‘rotten boy’.