Us in Ruins
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Narrated by:
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Jennifer Jill Araya
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Written by:
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Rachel Moore
About this listen
Margot is on the quest to uncover and reassemble an ancient—and cursed—vase, with the help of a boy who went missing in 1932, because it's the only way to put back together her broken heart in this standa-lone adventure rom-com, perfect for fans of What the River Knows and The Lost City.
The mythical Vase of Venus Aurelia hasn’t been seen since 1932, but Margot Rhodes is determined to change that.
Drawn by the vase’s supposed magical properties, Margot embarks on her school’s archaeological trip to Pompeii. Sure, it’s her first time holding a shovel, but she’s got something no one else does: lost teenage explorer Van Keane’s journal.
Poring over the poetic entries that serve as a map to the vase’s missing shards, Margot finds herself falling in love with the boy who wrote it a century ago. She’s shocked when her search leads her to a statue that looks exactly like Van, and then the statue comes to life.
Catapulted into the present, Van is nothing like the wordsmith Margot imagined. He’s all sharp edges, intent on retrieving the relic for all the wrong reasons. But it takes two to survive Venus’s death-defying challenges, and, together, Margot and Van must excavate the treasure—and their buried pasts—before their story ends in ruins.
With a blend of humor, magic, and love, Rachel Moore crafts another stand-alone adventure rom-com full of double- and triple-crosses, hilarious shenanigans, and frustration-fueled banter, where the best treasure is true love.
©2024 Rachel Moore (P)2024 HarperCollins PublishersWhat listeners say about Us in Ruins
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Amber Cardinal
- 2024-09-29
Great premise poorly executed
The idea for the story was really good, hence why I read it, but this would bore my 12 year old cousin. It’s labeled as Young Adult, but this is no more than a children’s book. I made it a few chapters in before I had to 1.7x speed because the male voices were so utterly goofy that it broke the pictures I had of them in my mind. Margot’s dad and Van sound the same and it’s ridiculous. I made it just over halfway in before it fell on my DNF list. Great idea, poor storytelling, poor narrating.
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