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Ghosting You
- Narrated by: Joel Leslie
- Length: 10 hrs and 13 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Tommy hears dead people. Okay, one dead person. His best friend, Chase. Since his death, Tommy can't stop hearing his voice. They talk every day and Tommy even sends him texts, but it always ends the same. Message failed to send. Until one day, a stranger texts back.
Getting stuck in nowhere Georgia was not on Nick's summer agenda, but a horoscope, a chance encounter, and a cute boy has things looking up. There's just one problem, the boy hates him. When a broken phone leaves him with a new number, Nick is ready to write off the entire summer as a loss. But then he receives a strange text.
When Tommy and Nick's worlds collide, the attraction is instant, but Tommy just can't let Chase go. Can Nick use his status as Tommy's anonymous stranger to break down his defenses or is Nick destined to live in a love triangle with a ghost?
What listeners say about Ghosting You
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Amazon Customer
- 2023-08-04
Excellent!
I loved this one! And a nice surprise to hear Joel Leslie narrating it! Highly recommend!
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Overall
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- T-in-a-dash
- 2024-02-05
Boring and a waste of time
Exhausting! This is the second book by this author that I’ve listened to. I didn’t like the first and can’t say this one fairs any better. Each of the books has a female best friend character that is supposed to be fierce but who’s character turns out to be super bossy and super annoying to me. some of the banter back-and-forth feels forced even though I am assuming it’s supposed to be witty, but to me it’s not nor is it funny.
I found the book too descriptive in parts, there was no happy medium and some of the overly descriptive aspects of this book just seemed to be filler and not for furthering the story in any aspect. I couldn’t understand why it was taking so long for things to happen, for valuable detail to be given or for the story to progress. All of the inner monologue and talking to the ghost without any real information about who the ghost was to him (i got that info from the synopsis), or why the ghost was talking to him or why he felt the need to constantly text his dead friend’s number. This author struggles to efficiently write depth of emotions, or any depth whatsoever. The story dragged with so much mundane nonsense, it got boring fast! It became ridiculous when I couldn’t even decifer who was talking as all the personalities of the males were so one dimensional.
To that end, I lost any form of desire to finish this book so i started skipping. This means I have no idea what happened to the ghost or how they even got together. I literally skipped from chapter 10 to chapter 64, listened for a few minutes, sighed and skipped right to the epilogue… I didn’t even finish that.
I love the narrator, Joel Leslie and even he seemed to suffer in this book.
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