
Heart of the Storm
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Narrated by:
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Hollis Elizabeth
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By:
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Nicole Stiling
Juliet Mitchell is doing just fine. Her career with the Shell Creek Police Department is on track, her son, Declan, is amazing, and for the first time in a long time, life is simple, if unremarkable. Until a dead body is found outside the Shell Creek Library.
Sienna Bennett doesn’t know how she ended up here. She’s overwhelmed as a big city victim advocate, her soon-to-be-ex-husband is living in their pool house, and she feels like her stepson, Declan, blames her for the state of their family. She needs something else to focus on.
Juliet and Sienna might share a history with Declan’s dad, but they’re nothing more than friendly acquaintances. When they’re thrown together in the midst of the biggest investigation Shell Creek has ever seen, neither anticipates a forbidden attraction. It definitely isn’t worth upending the life they’ve worked so hard for. Is it?
©2020 Nicole Stiling (P)2021 Bold Strokes Books IncListeners also enjoyed...




















Narration was excellent as usual.
This was a good book
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Engaging Story
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Good narration and story was complicated but at the end things do end up working out, they’re just different. And we don’t see it in the midst of the chaos, but the afterwards makes the Journey worth it, if you’re a good person and just want to be happy! Definitely looking up this writer again!!
Story imitates realism
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I genuinely thought the main characters had very little respect for the kid in the situation, and I also hated how they left it up to the dad, who had a track record of denial, sugar coating, and poor communication to explain things to the kid. the step mom had been around for a decade, two thirds of the kids life, he barely remembers a time without her, she is his parent, therefore, she had the right to set him straight on what the dad lied about/was in denial about. The mom could have had that conversation with him too.
People are flawed, and these things actually made the book more realistic, because those are the kinds of mistakes real people might make. I still felt frustrated by it though.
Frustrating realism
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