Deliver Me Audiobook By Remmy Duchene cover art

Deliver Me

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Deliver Me

By: Remmy Duchene
Narrated by: Paul Morey
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About this listen

The severe bullying he suffered as a teenager left Jack Flemming scarred both physically and emotionally. Now an adult, he has carved out a life for himself as co-owner of the Mechanic Shop. He enjoys his volunteer work with the throwaway boys, and has a supportive best friend. When the past resurfaces in a phone call from Zachariah Durban, Jack discovers that while living is easy, forgiveness is much harder.

Zachariah Durban did a bad thing when he was a young punk of a teenager. But right after he did it, he knew it wasn't right. Still, he ran away and made something of himself as a big shot author. Now, living in the south of France with writer's block hitting him hard, Zachariah knows something has to change - starting with earning Jack Flemming's forgiveness.

©2014 Remmy Duchene (P)2015 Dreamspinner Press
Contemporary Contemporary Romance Literature & Fiction Romance
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What listeners say about Deliver Me

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Deliciously heartbreaking love story.

Where does Deliver Me rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?

Fantastic story, definitely at the top of my list.

What was one of the most memorable moments of Deliver Me?

Holy christ, when Zach sees Jack's scars for the first time and he breaks down, Paul Morey really captured the pain in that moment. It was painfully, yes, but beautiful at the same time.

Which character – as performed by Paul Morey – was your favorite?

Zach!

Who was the most memorable character of Deliver Me and why?

Again, Zach. He is relentless in his pursuit of Jack.

Any additional comments?

Prom is supposed to be one of the most amazing nights of every senior’s life. But for Jack Flemming it was a nightmare, suffering through an extreme act of bullying that crossed the line over into a hate crime, leaving him permanently scarred mentally as well as physically. Fifteen years later and Jack has found a way past the depression, he is a successful business owner and volunteers at a local boys home. He has finally carved a life out of all the pain. Until the person responsible for that pain reappears in Jack’s life.

Zachariah Durban has spent the last fifteen years regretting not telling Jack that he loved him, regretting not stopping his friends from hurting Jack all those years ago. Determined to make Jack a part of his life again, Zach reaches out, but Jack is not about to make it that easy. He convinces Jack to come to Paris and give him a chance to explain. On the beautiful beaches of Saint Tropez France, child hood friends with a lot of baggage will get to know each other again and try to figure out if they can forgive and forget.

This book was absolutely delicious! Two of my favorite things are Remmy Duchene and Paul Morey, so this audio book was the perfect marriage of those two things. Duchene delivers her trademark style of an interracial couple that is broken and bent and determined to mend each other, regardless. The story is both engaging and intriguing. Here you have two grown men that have never been able to forget, to move past each other. There past is shrouded by this horrible event that left Jack scarred, but even that tragedy couldn’t kill the love they have for one another.

So Paul Morey steps in and gives these characters a voice, gives their pain a voice as well. Oh my god, to hear the literal break in Morey’s voice when Zach broke down the first time he sees the scars Jack carries, I don’t think I’ve ever heard so much emotion in another narration before, it broke my damn heart. Which is just what an excellent narrator should do, they should be able to convey an author’s words and allow the reader to have a visual picture of the mixture, words and tones.

Of course if you are a fan of Duchene’s books or Morey’s works you have to hear this one. Fans of gritty, passionate, dark and emotional love stories will enjoy this book as well. I’ll definitely listen to this one again, it was just so good.

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2 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Great Narration, OK story

This was a pleasant listen for me but I don't think I would have liked the ebook as much. Paul Morey does a great job at making an improbable story enjoyable. You will definitely have to suspend disbelief toward the circumstances of this couple's story. I mean there are stupid pranks and then there is TSTL actions, this story's conflict is in the latter category. But Paul's emotive read and fabulous accents kept me engaged. The story progresses at a very fast pace and wraps up with a nice, sweet and corny HEA. Overall I liked it.

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1 person found this helpful

  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Deliverance through Forgiveness

Which character – as performed by Paul Morey – was your favorite?

While I loved Jack and Zach, I have to say Roberto melted my heart.

Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?

I would have loved to, but time constraints prohibited that. I listen to audio books on my daily commute to and from the office...

Any additional comments?

WOW! This book had so many meanings to me and it's taken me a day to get my thoughts together to write this review. First off, I'm not an experienced M/M romance reader, so I'm going to tell you just what I took away from this story.....several words that come to mind are: Forgiveness, selflessness, and hope.
Jack Fleming has a past - he'd been horrifically bullied in high school and wore the scars physically as well as emotionally. He'd moved on and made a good life for himself, doing good things for others in the process.
Zachariah Durbin, the world famous writer also has a past. Prior to becoming a published author and attaining celebrity status, he had a hand in the incident that gave Jack Fleming the scars he wore.
You can never escape your past ....will your dastardly deeds come back to haunt you?
In the case of Zachariah, yes they did. Flash forward fifteen years and Zach is intent on talking to Jack. He must apologize - you know, make amends. After several angsty phone calls, Jack agrees to get on the private jet, sent by Zachariah and goes to meet his torturer.
What happens when the two men, (who at one time were best friends) see each other after fifteen long years?
I think what I loved best about this story is that you could easily insert a male and a female as main characters in your mind and the story would still stand true to the fact that you can't move forward until you FORGIVE. Forgiveness is the nucleus that gives life balance.
Were there steamy scenes in this story? Yes. It's a steamy romance. The steam just happened to have come from two males making love.
The foundation of the book wasn't wham bam thank you m'am and there wasn't sex on every page in the book. Matter of fact, the sex didn't come until the characters had been fully developed. The author took the time to give us, the readers, background and that was a home run for me. Don't get me wrong....I love me some sexy scenes, but I like to get to know my characters before I jump in the sack with them ;)
Overall, this was a great story with a powerful message. The author taps into bullying and how evil man kind can be. She gives us real characters, and teaches us the beauty of forgiveness....That one "F' word will indeed give you deliverance.
Aside from Jack and Zack, I have to say Roberto melted my heart and we could all be so lucky to have a friend like him.....I could totally hang out with him. I read this book in audio format and loved the narrator!

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars

Paul Morey does a great job but the story is weak

Any additional comments?

Jack and Zachariah “don’t call me Zac” were friends in high school until one day Zachariah and his football friends do something truly horrible to Jack that leaves him near death.

Now, fifteen years later, Zachariah has writer’s block and he’s calling on Jack for help.
After some resistance, Jack agrees to meet with Zachariah in Southern France and they work out their differences and realize that they still harbor deep feelings for each other and more.

**

Oh man. I really, really wanted to like this book and I really don’t want to write a review full of negativity… I liked the premise so much… I liked the writing and the narration… it seemed to have a nice flow… but…

First, I never understood why Zachariah treated Jack the way he did. It was brutal. Not just a prank, but brutality. And Zac’s answer to why he did it – “I don’t know, it seemed like the right thing at the time”. And, “I thought it was a harmless prank. I wasn’t thinking.” These just don’t jive for me. Even for a 17 year-old boy, none of that makes any sense. Jack was his friend. Even if he wasn’t publicly friends with him or if he was ashamed of the friendship, even if he was scared by his own feelings, even if he was feeling bullied by his football friends (which he never claims to be any of these), the amazingly abusive bullying he took part in makes absolutely no sense and then he simply walks away from him that night and then runs away from him once he finds out Jack’s in the hospital? It just doesn’t make sense.

If I were Jack I don’t believe there would be any way in hell I’d forgive him. Especially when he had not one real reason for doing it.

Second, if we ignore the first major hole in the plot and accept the fact that it happened… what causes Zac’s renewed interest? There are plenty of reasons he could have for wanting to reconnect, but we are given none. Then, when Zac decides he wants to see Jack again, he essentially bullies Jack into flying to France to see him. Why didn’t he just get on a plane himself if it was so important? And why did Jack get on the plane? That made no sense either. Zac almost got Jack killed and it’s Zac who needs closure – let the man come to you! Not to mention Jack has a business to run, kids who depend on him and the man almost got you killed!

Third, now that Jack is in France he goes to see Zac, then runs away when Zac can’t do anything but say he’s sorry, but Jack still stays in Zac’s house. Why not go to a hotel? Why not go home? The next time Jack sees him, Zac tells him he “wants him” and Jack punches Zac and then goes to live with Zac’s sister for a week. That makes no sense either. Again, this super-bad bully treats you like crap, you fly out to France to get closure, Zac can’t say anything that makes you feel better about the past and in fact tells you he wants you (from out of the blue and from a supposedly straight guy) so you appropriately get mad and then you stay with his sister? For a week? And Zac is supposedly looking for Jack this whole time but doesn’t ask his sister about it or talk to her the entire time. It struck me as confusing and very unbelievable.

Fourth, after some awkward discussions, Jack and Zac decide to date and after the second date they have sex. And then they fall in love and go to their high school reunion… it just kept getting more and more unbeliveable.

I don’t want to belittle the author’s efforts because I know that it’s hard to put together a complete story and plug all the little plot holes, but these are large, gaping holes, wide-enough-for-the-Nile-River holes. Obviously, since the book is now an audiobook it must have sold pretty well, but it didn’t gel with me.

I liked Jack’s character and really wanted him to make a stand. If there had been any sort of remotely understandable reason for Zac to act like he did and if Zac had taken some real steps toward making himself forgiven, the story could have been excellent. But having Zac say – “I don’t know why I did it” – just makes no sense and sets the rest of the story up poorly. I couldn’t like Zac. I couldn’t. He never redeemed himself to me and since Jack falls for him (never stopped loving him in fact) he ends up being someone I can’t like either.

Paul Morey did the narration for the audiobook and he did a nice job. I enjoyed his husky voice and liked the narration well enough to continue where I would have set the book down without finishing. Part of the reason I keep using Zac instead of Zachariah is that hearing Paul say that name over and over became really bulky. I understand why the character didn’t like the nick-name, but reading/hearing the full name repeatedly got distracting. But – having two lovers named Zac and Jack is awkward too.

Overall, I cannot really recommend this book. The MCs don’t act the way I think real people would react and the resulting romance is unbelievable as a result.


I give it 2 of 5 stars for the narration, the cover and the premise.

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