
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
It may be cold outside, but these four holiday novellas will warm you up.
It might be too late for readers of this audiobook review, but you should avoid reading the blurb. It covers 50% of the novella and the following 50% of groveling got tedious fast.
I disliked the booming sound of this novella. Also, after every editorial cut, the volume changed. The narrator goes on my 'avoid' list, with his random pauses after every few words and lack of voices.
Winter Knights, by Harper Fox:
Beautiful story, marvelous narrator.
Lone Star, by Josh Lanyon:
Forgetable. Narration was all right but the edited sentences added at a later point, sounded different.
The Christmas Proposition by K.A. Mitchel was a nice gay romance although in the end I missed some emotion. I did not like the ending. Good narration.
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- A man receives the gift of pleasure at the hands of two expert lovers.
- Boyhood sweethearts get a second chance at romance.
- Two very proper gentlemen indulge their forbidden desires.
My True Love Gave To Me, by Ava March:
- And a Christmas-tree farmer has an epiphany.
It might be too late for readers of this audiobook review, but you should avoid reading the blurb. It covers 50% of the novella and the following 50% of groveling got tedious fast.
I disliked the booming sound of this novella. Also, after every editorial cut, the volume changed. The narrator goes on my 'avoid' list, with his random pauses after every few words and lack of voices.
Winter Knights, by Harper Fox:
Beautiful story, marvelous narrator.
Lone Star, by Josh Lanyon:
Forgetable. Narration was all right but the edited sentences added at a later point, sounded different.
The Christmas Proposition by K.A. Mitchel was a nice gay romance although in the end I missed some emotion. I did not like the ending. Good narration.
View all my reviews
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