Musings on Romance

Tag: January LaVoy (Page 1 of 2)

It’s a Date (Again) by Jeneva Rose, narrated by January LaVoy

It’s a Date (Again) by Jeneva Rose, narrated by January LaVoy. Entertaining story, excellent narration.

Illustrated cover with purple background, featuring the titles and in the top and middle right a bunch of red roses being held by 3 separate forearms - one white in red plaid, one Black in a suit, the other white with tattoos and a rolled up white sleeve.

 

It’s a Date (Again) begins after Peyton Sanders has left an encounter with an unnamed man who had confessed his love for her. She told him she did not love him back but as she’s walking down the street, she’s devastated and crying. She meets an unhoused man, who offers her some advice and as a result, she realises that the only reason she’s so upset is that she does in fact love this man – she’s just terrified of things going wrong. Fresh with the realisation that she made a mistake and desperate to correct it, she’s running back toward her man when she’s hit by a car. She wakes up four days later in the hospital, with almost no memories. One of her BFFs, Mya, with whom she was on the phone at the time of the accident, knows she was in love with someone but Peyton had not yet shared his name.

When three men turn up to the hospital shortly after Peyton wakes, each claiming to be her boyfriend, Mya proposes that Peyton date each again to determine which one is her true love. (Peyton had been non-exclusively dating, each man knew this so there’s no cheating.) Is it Tyler, the construction worker, Sean, the business consultant, or Nash, the chef?

Peyton’s other BFF, Robbie, thinks she should wait until she’s better before putting this pressure on herself but he comes around to the notion after Peyton becomes aware of their “marriage pact” made when they were both 19 and in college. If neither were in a serious relationship by the time she turned 32 (which is in just two weeks), they would get together.

Experienced romance readers know exactly where this one is going of course.

A couple of few things:

Is the US health system so bad that someone waking up from the coma is discharged the same day with only a check of vital signs?
Peyton doesn’t have any broken bones and apart from some scratches on her hands and her memory loss, has no other injuries to speak of. There’s not much by way of even a headache. After she gets out of hospital there’s mention of the scratches on her hands and taking some medication but otherwise, she’s A-ok. I guess she was just lucky??
Why a marriage pact which matures on Peyton’s 32nd birthday? That seemed pretty random. (It was never explained in the book.)
The story takes place almost entirely over two weeks. I kept tripping over the fact that Peyton was in a coma only days before (in one instance the day before) and she was already going out and dating. It seemed too unbelievable.

I know “romance reasons” exist but these things did make me roll my eyes a bit.

Still, if one can overlook those pesky details, the story was otherwise fun. It’s the sort of book one can easily envisage as a movie actually. The episodic nature of it suits cinema. It has the heat level of a mainstream PG13 movie too. (That’s fine – it didn’t need more and I didn’t feel anything was lacking.)

One of the three guys turned out to be a real jerk (of course) but there was a bit of a mismatch with the way he was presented at first. It seemed like he’d suddenly had a personality transplant. I put it down to the author not wanting readers to feel sorry for him when he was not “the one”.

I knew who Peyton loved from the beginning but I nevertheless enjoyed the journey to her (second) realisation of it. I also enjoyed the friendship between Debbie (Peyton’s landlord and kind-of fairy godmother), Mya and Robbie. Mya is a stand-up comedian and there were more than a few laughs in the story as a result.

Listeners may wish to know that the story references prior death of both of Peyton’s parents in a car accident.

The narration was one of the main draws for me as I’d not read this author before. But January LaVoy is a fantastic narrator and I knew she would keep my ears entertained if nothing else. She has a great range of character voices and excellent acting skills which shine through in her performance. There’s a reason she’s one of my favourite narrators. I especially like her male character voices – though I sometimes wonder how she gets them so deep and/or rough/husky without hurting her voice.

With so many potential “heroes” Ms LaVoy had an opportunity to display multiple lead voices to (maybe) keep listeners guessing. Any one of them would have worked.

It’s A Date (Again) was entertaining and enjoyable, so long as you don’t think too much about some of the plot details – and paired with narration the calibre of January LaVoy’s, I count it a win.

Grade: B

Legacy by Nora Roberts, narrated by January LaVoy

Legacy by Nora Roberts, narrated by January LaVoy. Great narration but fairly light on the romance. Watch out for some fatphobia too.

Autumn scene of trees and a river with a covered bridge

 

Legacy is Nora Roberts’ 2021 release which has been languishing on my TBR until now. While I think it is not close to her best work, it certainly held my interest. The romance side of things is very slow to start and not at all the main focus of the book.

Adrian Rizzo was 7 years old when her father tried to kill her. She had been raised by a single mother; her biological father was a college professor who couldn’t keep it in his pants, had a problem with alcohol and was violent when he didn’t get his way. Somehow a reporter found out about Adrian’s existence which led to the professor’s downfall and definitely makes him (and his wife!) unhappy. So, dear old dad pays Adrian’s mother a visit and does violence to all in the house. As much damage as he causes, he does not survive the experience.

Adrian’s mother started “Yoga Baby”, fitness and workout classes, videos and merchandise. By age 16, Adrian wants to start her own version of the business and over the next few years, becomes very successful. Around the time she first found success with “Next Generation” she started getting poems containing death threats – one a year at first.

Adrian ends up moving to a small town where her grandparents are and settling in. She’s not like her mother who enjoys constant travel. Adrian wants to put down roots. She prefers to have a streaming type service for her workouts but does videos with her mother regularly too.

There’s a lot of family stuff. Roberts writes engaging characters so it was entertaining enough, particularly with excellent narration from January LaVoy.

Adrian’s eventual love interest is Raylan Wells. But Raylan has a tragedy of his own to live through first. (I’d heard about this from a friend when the book first came out and it was a reason I delayed starting Legacy.)

The threats to Adrian are escalating and eventually Adrian’s mother puts a private investigator on the case. She has more time than the police or FBI and she starts to make headway. She also finds out that “the poet” has killed multiple women in the years since he or she first started sending verses to Adrian. The threat to Adrian is very real.

The fitness and wellness aspects of the book were the least interesting for me. A little too much information and I felt uncomfortable with some of the messaging around the topic which I felt was fatphobic.

There were multiple instances where a character I came to care about died and I cried when I got to those bits.

The romance between Adrian and Raylan doesn’t even get started until 2/3 into the book and it’s fairly thinly developed. I prefer Roberts’ standalones which have more developed romance.

There were some other parts of the book which were a bit light on – for instance, Adrian is described as having a lifelong friendship with a character by the name of Lorilee but there’s almost nothing more about it in the book.

However, January LaVoy is always a pleasure to listen to and she elevated the story with her performance. As the title suggests, the characters in Legacy are multigenerational – Ms. LaVoy had the opportunity to showcase her wide variety of voices – multiple children, teens, adults and the elderly – all genders and all different. Just fantastic.

Of course, her tone and emotion was also wonderful, as I’ve come to expect.

While Legacy wasn’t my favourite, the narration alone made it worthwhile.

Grade: B

#RomBkLove Day 18: Speak to Me of Love

Blue graphic with books and a book light and the title: Day18: Romance audiobooks and #RomBkLove in English

When I thought about how best I could contributed to #RomBkLove almost my first idea was romance audiobooks with a focus on narrators. For those of us who love romance audio, we know it’s all about the narrator. A fantastic narrator can lift an okay book and make a great book come to life in new ways. I’ve said before that audio is a transformative medium. The listener experiences the story through the lens of the characterisation, tone, pacing and pitch of the narrator. When they get it right, it’s magic.

There are many brilliant narrators. My list of favourites is long but I’ve chosen just 6 to highlight today, paired with some of my favourite audiobooks from their catalogues. Continue reading

Under Currents by Nora Roberts, narrated by January LaVoy

A small rowboat is tied up at a wooden dock surrounded by reeds, on a lake at sunset, the colours are purples and redsWhy I read it:  I pre-ordered this one.

CW: Family violence, domestic abuse

What it’s about: (from Goodreads)  Within the walls of a tasteful, perfectly kept house in North Carolina’s Blue Ridge Mountains, young Zane Bigelow feels like a prisoner of war. Strangers—and even Zane’s own aunt across the lake—see his parents as a successful surgeon and his stylish wife, making appearances at their children’s ballet recitals and baseball games. Zane and his sister know the truth: There is something terribly wrong.

As his father’s violent, controlling rages—and his mother’s complicity—become more and more oppressive, Zane counts the years, months, days until he can escape. He looks out for little Britt, warning her Be smart. Be careful. In fear for his very life, he plays along with the insidious lie that everything is fine, while scribbling his real thoughts in a secret journal he must carefully hide away.

When one brutal, shattering night finally reveals cracks in the façade, Zane begins to understand that some people are willing to face the truth, even when it hurts. As he grows into manhood and builds a new kind of family, he will find that while the darkness of his past may always shadow him, it will also show him what is necessary for good to triumph—and give him strength to draw on when he once again must stand up and defend himself and the ones he loves.

What worked for me (and what didn’t):  Every year I eagerly await the new stand-alone Nora Roberts romantic suspense. Sometimes they miss more than they hit, but when they work for me they really work for me. Under Currents worked.

While I found it a little predictable at the end, I enjoyed the listen so much. The subject matter, dealing as it does with family violence (including spousal abuse, sexual, emotional and physical and child abuse, emotional and physical) is pretty brutal so it won’t be a book for everyone. But at various points throughout the story I was so tense and fearful about what was going to happen, as well as just plain happy as the romance blossomed. There are a few little romances in the book actually – more than one HEA is always a good thing.
Continue reading

« Older posts

© 2024 Kaetrin’s Musings

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑

Verified by MonsterInsights