His Truth
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Narrated by:
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Joel Leslie
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Written by:
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Riley Hart
About this listen
They were only kids when they met for the first time. Leo Mancini was the son of a judge. Roman Cipriani the son of a criminal. So different, yet as they shared stolen kisses and secret moments, they fell in love. One day they would run away together, have the future they deserved, because no one loved Leo like Roman did, or Roman like Leo did. But before they could make their dreams come true, their future was viciously stolen and their lives changed forever.
Roman has spent the last 12 years repressing the trauma in his past, trying to pretend it didn't exist, until even he believed his own lies.
Leo won't let himself forget what happened because he doesn't ever want to be that person again. He won't become the man his father wanted him to be or the guy who gets hurt when he lets someone in.
But in that split second when their eyes meet again, everything changes. Despite Leo's anger and Roman's denial, the connection they shared as teens is still there, too powerful to deny. Now, when their moments don't have to be stolen, they cling to what they've always craved - each other.
Roman and Leo aren't kids anymore, though - they can't lock themselves away from the world and pretend nothing exists but each other. A trauma like Roman suffered doesn't just go away, but now that Roman accepts his truth, can the two of them escape their demons before they destroy Roman and Leo a second time?
Contains mature themes.
©2018 Riley Hart (P)2018 TantorWhat listeners say about His Truth
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Anonymous User
- 2023-10-12
loved it
love The narrator. story shows what sone families are like. some places were long
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Overall
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Performance
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- T-in-a-dash
- 2024-12-04
Leo deserves better
I love Joel Leslie but even his narration couldn’t take away the frustration that was this book.
I couldn’t finish the book. I think the author failed in Rolan’s backstory. I would understand Roland being a tortured soul or his denial of who he was or hiding himself for 12 years if Leo was the one- when they were younger -that was brave and initiated their new experiences, but considering the opposite was the truth, It makes no sense that he gets caught, gets one beating from his discriminating, judgey, jealous, bitter, a** hole of a dad and that’s enough for him to immediately start thinking that he’s not gay, start spewing hatred and dropping the f word, and convincing himself he was going through a phase while being with Leo. It also made no sense and seems so far-fetched that even after 12 years, after he distances himself from his criminal family, takes himself through college and started his own successful company that he’s not just deep in the closet, he literally built a bunker that is one hundred feet below the closet. It’s one thing if the story had progressed where after he punched Leo he realized the error of his ways and then he came out when he was away from his family and in college and now seeing Leo’s brought everything back and he’s trying to regain Leo’s trust ...that would make the story plausible but as it is, it just seems so convoluted for no reason.
I don’t see how this relationship would happen even if at the end of the book he finds his way. here’s the thing, even if he later finds himself and says to Leo “you were the love of my life” if I was Leo I wouldn’t believe it because not only did he tell me he loved me when I was younger then punched me and left after saying a whole bunch of hateful things, 12 years later he’s still saying the hateful things...until he “finds his truth” and then all of a sudden he’s in love with me again. Who’s to say we have an argument and he’s back to thinking I tricked him into believing he was gay?
Nope. Leo would be better off if he just said “I hope you find yourself and when you do and you need a friend, then look me up” and moved on.
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