This is a book two in the Cronin’s Key Series, and I feel it is best read in order since this one picks up after the first. Alex, Cronin and all his friends are back and recuperating from the last mystery. They are also waiting to see what the next task is for Alex before..
View: joelfroomkin - page 795
Terrible Narrator
Review from Say You’re Sorry →
I have really enjoyed all of these stories that take place in and around With a Kick, a charming ice cream shop in London run by Patrick and Lee (more on them in a bit) The first story, Pluck and Play, is about Curtis and Riley, and you gotta love a cowboy. Curtis runs his..
I enjoyed this book. Like Faderman’s other books, some of the minor facts are wrong—but nothing terribly important. And periodically words and phrases are used incorrectly; something a good editor could have solved. But overall it is a good telling of an interesting story about and important person. Well worth it. The narrator was good..
Amazing book!
Review from Mason Dixon: Monster Hunter →
I was given this free review copy audiobook at my request and have voluntarily left this review. Amazing book! Especially if you love magical and fantastical creatures with some mystery in it! Only downside is it’s short, I wish there was more in a book. Hopefully the sequels are longer and I look forward to..
Great Story
Review from Say You’re Sorry →
I was hooked on this story from the very beginning. It was exciting, suspenseful and steamy. The romance and relationship between Daisy and Gideon did seem rushed, but that did not really distract from the *ahem* relations. Joel Froomkin’s narration by the end started to grate on my nerves. Or maybe it was Gideon’s character..
I really love Rose’s character development. The story draws you in and keeps you there until the last page. I love that characters from other books are present, like visiting old friends. Yes, there’s an order, but I only realized that after my second book, and then I realized the treasure chest I stumbled upon!
So sweet
Review from The Weight of It All →