There are do many things wrong with the book, some of them disturbingly wrong. The overriding theme of the book is the purchasing and absolute control of slaves. Virtually all of the slaves are women, and the main character has no moral problem with ownership of slaves nor with having sex with slaves. It sadly reads like a puerile women-as-objects male fantasy. To compound this, all of the women are happy to be slaves. The author managed to fit in every single negative cliche about women — if you can think it up, its in there.
Managing conflict is something the author struggles with, always killing off characters (sometimes in violently gruesome ways) to move the plot forward. Its about as subtle as a teen slasher movie.
Finally, the main character earns "points" based upon the number of slaves he has, and is able to convert those points into cash. But, the economics and math just don’t make any sense.
The only saving grace is the narration. The narrator does an excellent job, even if the material was not worth the effort.
I would have returned the book for a credit, but then Audible won’t let you review it. So, I sacrificed a credit so you didn’t have to listen to this. Your welcome.