An Unseen Attraction Audiobook By KJ Charles cover art

An Unseen Attraction

Sins of the Cities, Book 1

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An Unseen Attraction

By: KJ Charles
Narrated by: Matthew Lloyd Davies
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About this listen

A slow-burning romance and a chilling mystery bind two singular men in the suspenseful first book of a new Victorian series from K. J. Charles.

Lodging-house keeper Clem Talleyfer prefers a quiet life. He's happy with his hobbies, his work - and especially with his lodger Rowley Green, who becomes a friend over their long fireside evenings together. If only neat, precise, irresistible Mr. Green were interested in more than friendship....

Rowley just wants to be left alone - at least until he meets Clem, with his odd, charming ways and his glorious eyes. Two quiet men, lodging in the same house, coming to an understanding...it could be perfect. Then the brutally murdered corpse of another lodger is dumped on their doorstep and their peaceful life is shattered. Now Clem and Rowley find themselves caught up in a mystery, threatened on all sides by violent men, with a deadly London fog closing in on them. If they're to see their way through, the pair must learn to share their secrets - and their hearts.

©2017 K. J. Charles (P)2017 Audible, Inc.
Historical Historical Fiction Romance Victorian Fiction Heartfelt Feel-Good
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What listeners say about An Unseen Attraction

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Delightful

I'm fond of adventures featuring everyday people, and this is an excellent example. I felt like I could have been one of the other residents of the boarding house or regulars at the Jack and Knave. KJ Charles' historical worldbuilding is thorough without beating you over the head with endless descriptive passages, so that you're just dropped into the rich complexity of Victorian London and allowed to live there. This is a gentler, slower story than some of her wild rides, but there's plenty of excitement, a little horror, and some truly hilarious animals.

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6 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Fun romp

Wonderful fun Victorian romance, with the added allure of a muder mystery, family secrets, and illicit love.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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Enjoyable, but NSFW

The spicy scenes were a little gruff for my tastes, but everything else was enjoyable. The story is interesting and the characters are compelling.

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Thrilling

I enjoyed this book and storyline completely. It kept me guessing and I am incredibly excited to listen to the next book!

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  • Overall
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    4 out of 5 stars

LGBQT friendly historical romance

I am not usually a consumer of romances. Partially because I have an impression of them being rather one note (fair or not) and partially, no doubt, because my own experiences with romantic love have not been kind. But, this one promised at least some mystery and it was set in Victorian England and it has sexual, racial and ability representations which are deeply important to me. Added to that that this happens to be part of the plus catalog on a month when I cannot spend more money on credits, and decided to try it

I am so glad I did. I loved the narrator, who I thought did a great job (I am American and do not have a perfect grasp of regional accents elsewhere but I believe this was handled well, to my limited knowledge). I loved the characters: gentle, lovable Clem who is neurodivergent and courageous in a world which, even now, does not perfectly fit people like us. Capable, patient and traumatized Rowley, dealing with the spector of child abuse and rising above it.

I enjoyed their coming together (though I feel slow burn is a bit of an exaggeration, I also don't read many romances so maybe it is slow for them to get together by chapter 3) and I was surprised by the conclusion to a degree (I had my suspicions of the culprit but I really couldn't be sure). I enjoyed the descriptions and the writing. I don't really feel "cliffhanger" is accurate. You are given enough of an ending to reasonably stop reading the books if you want, and feel satisfied, though I intend to try the next myself.

I do want to address a couple of the other reviews, since I can't comment on them directly. Calling Clem "TSTL" really disappointed me. He is, in fact, NOT stupid. He is someone dealing with a difference that means that he has to think and react in ways that are not necessarily run of the mill but which do make sense. I think he was a very well researched character who adapted realistically within his capacity.

Living with neurodivergency is not a one size fits all thing and the author still represented him well to me, and I am both neurodivergent myself and work with neurodivergent people. Another review claimed that no one showed courage. Incorrect. Courage is not the absence of fear, after all. Both characters had challenges. Rowly came from a violent background and like many trauma victims had triggers. Clem was dealing with challenges that made doing ordinary things courageous in a way.

If you have a need for flawless characters with perfect bodies and minds who react to danger as if it's a game or as if showing feelings is weakness, this won't be your book. However, I'd take friends like these characters any day over that other type of character.

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3 people found this helpful

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Brilliant start to atmospheric new series

If was one of persons who - one click - AKA as readers and listeners who buy everything one's favorite authors/singer/actor makes , no matter the topic , genre, etc.,

Which I am not . Yet, if I were , KJ Charles will have been my one click.

Matthew Lloyd Davis perfectly brought to live this entertaining, well crafted , atmospheric, layered , Victorian London , murder , mystery , MM romance.

Of the many things, I enjoyed about An Unseen Attraction is both MCs being gay isn’t what the storyline is about. The mysterious happenings and then their friendship/relationship are the plotlines. Clem and Rowley know who and what they're and with whom they want to be. There isn't contrived, unnecessary angst and drama to move the narrative.

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Good, with room for improvement

I must say i didnt expect this to have the rather x rated scenes it had but for all that it was well written and the characters were wonderful. The mystery was far too easy to solve, but it made a good backdrop for the characters and kept the story moving. for only being 7 hours long, it had plenty of depth and i enjoyed it.

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Good

This was a pretty good read that I listened to on audio. Clem Tallyfer runs a lodging house in London. Clem is friends, and longs to be more, with Rowley Green, one of his lodgers who is a Preserver (Taxidermist). This was one of these books that starts out slow but I kept listening and really liked it. Rowley Green loves his new place because it is close to his shop. When one of the other lodgers turns up dead Clem and Rowley are determined to figure out who did it and becomes apparent that it was not an accident and they are both in danger. Thus was a goid mystery from an other that I have read before. I also liked the narrator of this book. I am looking forward to listening to the next book in this series.

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Everything I expect from a KJ Charles book

An Unseen Attraction by KJ Charles is a historical mystery. It is an enjoyable book. Rollie and Clem, the main characters, have a relationship that develops over the course of the book. Clem had a British father and an East Indian mother who were not married. His whole life he was been an outsider and treated as "less than". Rollie's father was a violent man who was hanged when Rollie was a teen. Two men who the English society have disdain and yet were more decent than the nobility in the story. Matthew Lloyd Davies is a terrific narrator. He does a great job on the range of accents and voices. An enjoyable book.

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Beautiful character design

The story as a whole is lovely, but what really makes it great is the choice of such a compelling & lovable lead in Clem. It’s rare you see queer people, neurodivergant people , or people of color in a period piece , let alone a lead who is all three. High marks for the author who managed to create a full and layered character and not a caricature. Truly excellent writing.

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