by Anita Shreve ; Read by Gregory Harrison & Judith Ivey ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 22, 1994
They met and fell in love during a week-long summer camp experience when they were 15. Thirty-one years later, through secret letters and clandestine phone calls, they rekindle their passions and the loss of innocence proves fatal. Using two readers for a boy-girl romance is a logical method of making the piece a dramatic presentation. And it would be easier to discern between flashbacks and current events if the readers used urgency in their voices to help the sentences along. But there is no rushing to a climax that would take this presentation from the mediocre to the very good. Gregory Harrison manages some pathos for the male character, but Judith Ivey's reading is flat, pleasant, and all the same. Not sad, not rapturous, and certainly not dramatic.
Pub Date: Jan. 22, 1994
Duration: 3 hrs
Publisher: The Publishing Mills
Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026
by K.M. Jackson ; Read by Diana Luke ‧ RELEASE DATE: N/A
A model and a mogul get married in Vegas on a bet, and Diana Luke narrates their story with élan. While it would be easy to portray Leila Darling as a scheming caricature or Carter Bain as a ruthless businessman, Luke never crosses that line. Her portrayal of Leila is generous and encompasses the full range of her character--from the formidable professional at the top of her game to the vulnerable woman who is unsure if she can trust a man with her heart. Likewise, Luke's portrayal of Carter showcases both his business acumen and his emotional vulnerability as he opens himself up to Leila. While loosely connected to the previous Unconventional Brides volumes, this can easily stand alone.
Pub Date: N/A
Duration: 9 hrs
DD ISBN: 9781501968471
Publisher: Recorded Books Inc.
Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026
by LaVyrle Spencer ; Read by David Dukes ‧ RELEASE DATE: N/A
After her divorce, Roberta Jewett, with her three daughters, returns to Camden, Maine, to start a new life. Such an independent move in 1916 brings difficulties with her mother, her in-laws and the townspeople. Dukes's performance, while skillful, sometimes suffer in scenes of emotional content. His pace slows, and his reading acquires the peculiar emphasis of someone trying to get instructions across to a non-English-speaking person. The effect is disturbingly laughable. When he resumes his normal pace, the story revives and personalities emerge again, but the awkwardness remains as an odd interruption to Spencer's drama of pain and love, dispelling Dukes's carefully constructed characterizations.
Pub Date: N/A
Duration: 3 hrs
Publisher: Dove
Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026
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