
Shadow & Storms
The Legends of Thezmarr, Book 4
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Acheter pour 35,34 $
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Narrateur(s):
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Mollie Stark
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Sebastian Grove
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Auteur(s):
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Helen Scheuerer
À propos de cet audio
“She was ready to shed blood, ready to take back what was hers.”
The time has come to make one last stand against the forces of cursed men and monsters. But Thea’s enemies are only getting stronger. With allies divided and an outnumbered army, she must race against her own fate to secure the future of the midrealms—or die trying.
A prophecy is looming, and Thea’s life is in the balance. Does she have the power to cheat death itself?
Love and loyalty will be tested. Bonds will fracture forever. But all must fight for a better world.
In the final war for survival, will Thea and Wilder emerge victorious? Or will the shadows consume them at last?
Fans of Fourth Wing, The Witcher, and The Bridge Kingdom, brace yourselves for sizzling romance, found family and heart-pounding battles in Shadow & Storms, the epic finale to The Legends of Thezmarr.
©2024 Helen Scheuerer (P)2024 Dreamscape MediaHardly anything happens for the first 8 hours into the book. There are far too many repetitive phrases throughout the book for my liking. My frustration is only soothed slightly, thanks to the few wholesome moments of friendship and sisterly bond sprinkled here and there.
The "spice" is sooo mild and repetitive, it's like eating the same cup of instant noodles for 3 months straight. As if that is not disappointing enough, Sebastian Grove's robotic and monotone narration robs you of any shred of joy you might gain from the lukewarm romantic exchanges between the story's MMC and FMC.
Mollie Stark's performance -while reasonably expressive- leaves much more to be desired. All of the male characters sound the same; so throaty and breathy that I find myself wanting to offer her hot tea and a lozenge.
Why offer dual narration then, if each narrator just reads their own chapter and calls it done? With just a bit more effort and coordination, perhaps Sebastian Grove could have spared us all from Mollie Stark's awful male impressions.
Overall, the combination of lazy writing, a weak plot, and suboptimal narration has lead me to loathe this book, and the series by extension.
A whole Lotta nothing
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