
The Long Way Home
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Narrated by:
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Melody Muzljakovich
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By:
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Rachel Spangler
They say you can't go home again, but Raine St. James doesn't know why anyone would want to.
Rory St. James was disowned after she came out at 17. She rebounded by moving to Chicago, changing her name to Raine and putting down her hometown to audiences around the country. Now, 10 years later, too old to be considered a gay youth, broke, evicted, and fresh off a much needed break-up, Raine St. James is forced to accept a job teaching at Bramble University in Darlington, the town she's been publicly bashing for the last decade.
Beth Devoroux was born and raised in Darlington. Despite losing her parents at a young age, she has been nurtured by the people of the town and is well loved by everyone who knows her. She leads a comfortable life with good job at Bramble University, a long-term but closeted relationship, friends that she can count on, and everything she thinks she wants, so why is she so drawn to a rabble-rouser like Raine St. James?
Two women who couldn't be less suited for romance - a hometown girl and the one who vowed never to look back - are drawn together by a shared past and a passion for each other neither can deny.
©2010 Rachel Spangler (P)2017 Bold Strokes Books IncListeners also enjoyed...




















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Close to home
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My first Spangler book...
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not too bad
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As for the story, it was interesting and engaging. I liked both of the main characters, and the secondary cast was well written. There is definitely some Disney-fication of the alleged homophobic small town; there are plenty of small towns in the US where there is actual homophobia so intense that LGBTQ+ youth get *unambiguously* disowned or even lose their lives to hate crimes. Rory’s big claim to victimhood seems pretty overblown in comparison in the end. Still, if you’re able to just roll with it and look past that issue, it’s a good story.
Good audiobook
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