
Pure Jade
Painting the Mists, Book 4
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Narrated by:
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Adam Verner
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By:
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Patrick Laplante
He’d like to forget, but the pain runs deep....
After fighting off a group of bandits, Cha Ming helps a people rebuild. His heart is heavy with guilt, but he can’t stay long. To face an inevitable foe, Cha Ming must journey to Quicksilver City, where he’ll meet the man who once enslaved him. Will he find the courage to face him?
Meanwhile, Huxian, the two-tailed fox, is enjoying his new role as the ruler of a demon mountain. The perks are great, but the position comes with heavy responsibilities. When Cha Ming’s friend Wang Jun finds an immortal-jade mine on his doorstep, he has no choice but to defend it.
It’s Huxian’s pride against Wang Jun’s ambitions. Cha Ming must find middle ground. If he doesn’t, he’ll lose one of his friends. Forever.
©2020 Patrick G. Laplante (P)2020 Podium AudioListeners also enjoyed...




















Good
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yummy
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Great comeback!
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'Black lines on the forehead' is exasperation
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Better than last book that's not saying much
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Between that and the constant crippling of the MC, the whole story becomes a repetition of sad, obvious tropes. It honestly takes away from the detail and enjoyment I want to have in the story. We get it, you watched dbz growing up. But this isn’t that and you don’t do it as well. Meh due to author’s laziness with structure.
Oh, and tactics are nonsensical when it would make for a bigger struggle for the good guys. We should just believe things are terrible for them and there’s obvious reasons they shouldn’t take the advantage when they can. The author tries way to hard to make it a struggle for the MC. It’s not just having to barely win, at any point in a major fight if the good guy is doing well, they’re about to get screwed. Even if they did the whole overcoming odds and finally getting an advantage, the author will not stand for it. He will immediately make it almost impossible for them. It’s a drain on listening when rooting for the good guys is a losing proposition while the story tries to argue for morality.
Starting over and constantly handicapped
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