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Epilogue

The Dark Duet: Book 3

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Epilogue

By: CJ Roberts
Narrated by: Anthony Elmer
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Buy for $15.72

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I’m writing this because you begged. You know how I love the begging. In fact, you probably know too many things and know them far too well. Who am I? Well, that’s what I’m trying to figure out. I was a whore in my youth, a killer since my adolescence, and a monster as a man. I am the man who kidnapped Livvie. I am the man who held her in a dark room for weeks. But, most importantly, I am the man she loves. She loves me. It’s quite sick, isn’t it? Of course, there’s more to our story than can be surmised in a few short sentences, but I’m at a loss for justifying my behavior back then. I assume if you’re reading this, I don’t need to make those justifications. You’ve already made your own. You’re reading this because you want to know about the rest of the story. You want to know what happened that warm summer night in September of 2010, the night I met Livvie at The Paseo. It was the night my life changed all over again. It didn’t happen exactly as Livvie said. She’s been very kind to me in the retelling of our story. The truth is far more…complicated.

©2013 CJ Roberts, Neurotica Books (P)2014 Audible Inc.
Romance Suspense

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I had so much trouble sticking with this because this narrator is just rushing through it without proper emphasis or intonation. it sounds like someone reading aloud but not enjoying it or caring what it's about at all. I loved the 1st two books and was really looking forward to the conclusion. the switch of pov from hers to his with this narrator is making me think I should go back later and just read it myself to get more out of it. It has to be better than how I feel after listening to this.

Ugh! This narrator!

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I must say with surprise...I loved this book! I hated book one and two...but I really liked this one!

well...I loved it!

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The story was good, but the narrations was rushed in my opinion. I couldn't get in to the story as much as with the other books, only because of the narration.

Good ending

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Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?

No. I think I would have preferred reading this one, but overall, the tone of Epilogue was juvenile and it didn't match the first two books in the series. It felt like a quickly written response to fans who wanted more from a story that had ended so well already in the Duet.

What was the most interesting aspect of this story? The least interesting?

I liked a few of the tender moments. I liked finding out what happened in the gap between the end and the epilogue of Seduced in the Dark.

The least interesting is Epilogue's epilogue 2.0--it is the most juvenile of juvenile commentary in the book.

Who would you have cast as narrator instead of Anthony Elmer?

Let me say this first--I think Anthony Elmer has a good voice. I think he would bode well with comedy, or even the Brothers In Arms series. As Caleb/James, not so much. Another point in his favor is that I think the actual writing lent itself to a bubblegum interpretation.

Mostly though, he needed the accent that Emily Durante, or anyone who could do it justice, could portray. He read way too fast, and the characters seemed way more comical than the serious ones we had grown accustomed to in the Duet. If he'd read with more even pace and sensuality, I think I would have been able to overlook the missing accent (some). Still, the tone of the writing was what drastically changed.

Could you see Epilogue being made into a movie or a TV series? Who should the stars be?

No, but the Duet may bode well on Cinemax.

Any additional comments?

Even though Caleb and Livvie were "above ground" in this book, I think it was too light. It was difficult to go from an erotic scene, or a (borderline) anger scene, to most of the others, because it was so OMG--so Twitterverse--so Sweet Sixteen. I purposely used that terminology to put you in the frame of mind I was in as I listened, after expecting to read about the adult challenges of two broken people trying to make a twisted love work, without the comfort of seclusion. I don't think you can go back to being a bubblegum teen after being human trafficked. Thankfully, I don't know for sure, but that's my best guess. The series would have ended better at book 2.

Good moments, but overall lacking

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This is how to write a anti-hero male protagonist. Great reading! If not a tad disturbing. Really lets my imagination work. Hate books that constantly remind readers how hot a character. Like we have amnesia or some such ailment. It's belittling.

Caleb, sweet mercy

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