
All for You
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Narrado por:
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Guillaume Dubois
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De:
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J. P. Oliver
I want to move forward…but I don’t know how.
Jay Pittman’s had it rough. Kicked out of the house as a teenager for being gay, his life became a constant struggle to survive. Selling himself seemed like the only option…but thanks to a stranger’s kindness, Jay’s been able to start putting the pieces of his life back together. If only it were so easy to fix the anxiety and depression that rampage through his mind as well.
I’m not giving up on you.
Corey Rowe is a born nurturer. A doctor by trade and a volunteer working with abuse victims by choice, meeting Jay has every professional instinct engaged with the need to help Jay overcome the traumas of the past. But as Jay begins to open up, Corey must face his own demons and answer the question: Is it safe for him to lay his heart on the line?
They build them big in the town of Harlan, Colorado - where the winters are beautiful and the mountain men are gorgeous. Listen along as we join them in Harlan, where the pain of the past drips away as these sexy, rugged mountain men find their true loves and embrace a lifestyle of happily ever afters. This audiobook and every other audiobook in the For You Series can be listened to in any order.
©2019 Special Fiction Books (P)2019 Special Fiction BooksListeners also enjoyed...




















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Loved this couple
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All the emotional feels!
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emotional...
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This narrator knows how to change his voice for each of his characters and keep the listened tuned into the story.
EMOTIONAL BAGGAGE CAN BE UNPACKED IN A GOOD WAY
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Sweet and sad listen
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The narrator, Guillaume Dubois, has a nice voice and I liked that he had a unique voice for the different characters.
He really seemed to enjoy pronouncing déjà vu the correct French way. His pronunciation of brusque and reconcile... not so correct.
I also noticed how, with every narrative sentence (particularly in reading the Corey portions) the last word would be read as if it were the period at the end of the sentence, and so the reading had a staccato feel to it that eventually became a bit monotonous. (The dialogue, however, was very natural and a welcome relief from the narrative portions, making me wonder if the book would be better if read without audio).
In chapter 8(9) we hear, I believe for the first time, that Jay has a beard. I had never, up to then, pictured him that way. But since the synopsis of "All for You" refers to "rugged mountain men" I guess I should have assumed that applied to Jay as well? Plus he had been homeless. He didn't sound rugged though. Corey, on the other hand, in chapter 8(9), is clean-shaven and sounded rugged.
My biggest complaint about "All for You" may be due to my not having read previous books of the series; and so, if readers of this review HAVE read them, you will likely rate this higher than my 3 stars. In particular, it seemed to me that the most interesting parts of the story were relayed through the BACKSTORIES of both Jay and Corey. (Each of their pasts sounded more interesting than their present, during which the story takes place).
The most energetic vocal outburst was a character's response to hearing about something from the backstory (or, rather, someone... who never shows up in the story itself) and the most poignant emotional response of a character was related to a previously-unmentioned character from his own backstory (who also never shows up in the story itself). It is one thing, as a reader, to "hear about" something/someone from the past and quite another to vicariously live through those events/characters as we read them in the real-time words of an unfolding story (versus being told, by a character, about what happened in the past and people they knew). You just don't get the same emotional impact that way... despite the forceful outburst I just mentioned -- that seemed (to me) a bit overdone -- by a present-day character who, like the readers of the book, are hearing about someone they never met or will meet.
If those backstories had been integrated into "All for You" -- perhaps beginning the book back all those years earlier (or cutting away to take readers back in time to when those events occurred so the reader can also live through it) rather than the whole story taking place over the few days of a relatively uneventful present -- the book would have been (in my opinion) far more engaging. While it was interesting to see Corey and Jay meet and ultimately connect, there really wasn't much present-day drama to make the overall story compelling. It's sort of felt like coming upon a crowd and finding out about what happened and why they're all still there (although what happened is all over by the time you arrive).
"Wow!" you say, "Wish I could've been here to see that!"
In my first paragraph of this review (above), I referred to "a hint of something ominous to come".
NO SPOILER.
Or maybe it is. Okay... stop reading.
Turns out ....
I warned you -- stop reading... this might be a spoiler...
I warned you.
As for the "hint of something ominous to come" that I was expecting...
it turns out there was no specific present-day event/experience that came.
Rather, the ominous event I'd braced myself for was [drum roll] the telling of the backstory and how it had led to the extreme trauma Jay experiences in the present-day. Basically what we knew all along.
From the sounds of the Epilogue, the next book may be a case of deja vu.
I had higher hopes for this book because J.P. Oliver is an excellent writer. Anyhow, it's not bad. I doubt J.P. could write a bad book. So I would still recommend, because sometimes we want a break from stories that have too much drama.
"Wish I could've been there!" and What about Nick?
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Loved this story
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The narrator does a decent job with clarity and pace. I like most of the voices that he has for the characters.
Jay and Corey
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Jay has PTSD due to his family rejecting him at a young age. He ends up on the streets. He gets help from a police officer and then goes to live with his cousin.
Corey see's Jay at a coffee bar and is smitten. He asks Jay's cousin to introduce them.
What follows his a love story and the fight to handle PTSD in order to live and love!
Great Story!
Everything for Jay and Corey
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Lovely emotional read
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