All That Lies Within Audiobook By Lynn Ames cover art

All That Lies Within

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All That Lies Within

By: Lynn Ames
Narrated by: Emily Beresford
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Buy for $21.01

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How far would you go to hide who you really are inside? And what do you do when you find the one person from whom hiding your true self isn't an option?

Glamorous movie star Dara Thomas has it all - an Oscar nomination, dozens of magazine covers proclaiming her the sexiest woman alive, and people of both sexes clamoring for her attention. She also has a carefully guarded secret life.

As Constance Darrow, Dara writes Pulitzer Prize-winning fiction, an outlet that allows her to be so much more than just a pretty face. Rebecca Minton is a professor of American Literature in love with the work of the mysterious, reclusive author Constance Darrow, with whom she strikes up a correspondence. A chance phrase in a letter leads her to a startling conclusion about the author. What happens next will change the course of both of their lives forever.

©2013 Lynn Ames (P)2014 Audible Inc.
Literature & Fiction Contemporary
Unique Storyline • Beautiful Love Story • Fabulous Voice Acting • Loveable Lead Characters • Creative Plot

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i really enjoyed the book overall . it just seem a little bit rushed in the end. it could have been drawn out a little long to give Tara's revelations more depth and an epilogue who have been great part to put Jessica giving Tara the ring.

Really good book.. not a good ending

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This is the first of this author I have listened to and also the first by this narrator. It will not be the last. The premise of the story is different and unique whilst taking the celebrity and ordinary person trope to a new level. I hope other readers will enjoy this work as much as I did.

Good good good

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The premise was good but follow through lacking. First half of story was good but Second was just a bunch of over dramatic cliche glom of repetitive language without substance.

Could have been better

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The story started off as a breath of fresh air from you normal whirlwind romance. The characters seemed fully flushed in the fact that they had their own lives and weren't just waiting around for love (or a good lay).

Synopsis: Dara Thomas is Hollywoods sweetheart moonlights as Pulitzer Prize fiction writer Constance Darrow. After finding out her estranged mother is dying, she flies to NYC to see her for the last time. She has to navigate her way through her mothers last apology and what it means to love again. Rebecca Minton is a collage professor obsessed with Constance's work and low key crushing on Dara. Once her and Constance's correspondence beings it's typical "I don't know why I feel so close to this person I barely know" flirtationship. After connecting to dots Rebecca and Dara form an "unlikely bond" to save the script of Dara/Constance's movie.

Sex: I honestly I couldn't tell if their flirting went over my head or if they had no chemistry from the letters. The most memorable scene for me was there second in person meeting after Dara chased after Rebecca. That was several hours into the book! The sex was very straight forward and more on the romantic side. I defiantly wasn't fanning myself but all in all a decent scene. Not notably cringe worthy until her dead mother pops up.

Plot: I was initially intrigued with the seeing angels aspect but how it was written was more of a last min plot device to try to bring interest. The explanation of how it stopped and why it started again felt like a transparent attempt at tying lose ends. Being a sensitive soul I am, I liked that the mothers death wasn't dwelled on but I do think it should have been more highlighted than it was.

On to narration:
The narrator gave Dara a husky sultry voice. That, along with the almost indifferent dialogue after her mothers death, chipped away at the character I felt Dara was in the beginning. I'm all for two fems but I think Rebecca's voice was too chipper for someone so supposedly scored... maybe switch the voices???

At times the writing was nothing more than literary bragging making the dialogue flat and impersonal. In the end I did believe these characters could love each other.

TL;DR- A basic book

3.5 for innovation w/slight spoilers

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sometimes these romance stories are a little unbelievable. This one is very on-point. The narrator was also excellent.

Great believable story

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