Only One Lie Audiobook By Audrey J. Cole cover art

Only One Lie

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Only One Lie

By: Audrey J. Cole
Narrated by: Krys Janae, Kimberly Austin
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About this listen

From the author of The Pilot’s Daughter and The Final Hunt comes a thrilling, suspense-driven mystery set in World War II-era Seattle.

Seattle, 1942. News of the war is interrupted by the kidnapping of young Max Ellis, heir to the wealthiest banking family on the west coast. When the boy’s parents comply with the ransom demands, the kidnapper is found dead and their son remains missing. For newlywed Vera Chandler, the story hits close to home—her husband Hugh is just six months into his job as the Ellis’s private pilot.

Within days, Hugh is deployed to the Pacific as a navy pilot, while Vera’s flying instructor and best friend joins the Women’s Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron. Left alone, her parents’ words haunt her: If you really wanted to serve your country, you wouldn’t have dropped out of nursing school.

In an exchange for a favor that Vera can’t refuse, she is pulled into the Ellis family affairs by the desperate mother of the missing child. The Ellis family, Vera learns firsthand, is as dangerous as they are rich. Soon, she is in a race to save the child’s life, and it could be the only way she can save her own.

©2022 Audrey J. Cole (P)2022 Spotify Audiobooks
Historical Mystery Thriller & Suspense Exciting
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*4.75 stars*

This standalone is told in third person POV and leaves you with a HEA. I’m not a big fan of third person POV, but I was able to follow along (after a rough beginning that was a little jumbled and confusing) and finish the story.

I listened to the audiobook and when I wasn’t following along with the book, it did get a little confusing by jumping around to different characters and what was going on with them at that moment. I think if it was specified in the audiobook when the character focus changed it would help. Regardless, I was able to get through it.

I liked that Vera was a woman who wasn’t afraid to follow her dreams in an era that frowned upon women pilots. It was interesting to see how the mystery unfolded and the people involved were revealed.

I did enjoy hearing/seeing how Vera’s friends were in training for WASP. I didn’t see how it helped with Vera’s story, but if Lily, Percival and Dari (her past and what led up to her major event with a sweet reunion) had their own books, I would probably read them.

This is the first time I have read/listened to anything by this author. While this book wasn’t one that made me instantly want to read the author’s whole catalog of books, I am willing to read more. I received an advanced readers copy via Hidden Gems. These thoughts and opinions are my own.

4.75 stars

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This story was slow getting started but once it did, it had me on the edge of my seat. Would make a great movie.

Suspenseful

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The story was good. I was not crazy about the narrator & I am truly sorry to say that. Also, the use of the word ‘toward’ or ‘towards’ was ridiculously over used it got under my skin.

Courageous Women

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And even more poorly narrated. This had to have been self-published, as there is no evidence of an editor’s hand anywhere. Misused words abound. “She let out an exacerbated sigh.” Really? Either the writer is a 20-something with a limited vocabulary and no editor, or the narrator is an even bigger idiot with a producer who didn’t notice a problem. either. (By the way, the Vera narrator was far better than the Priscilla narrator, who could not simply tell the story without trying to infuse it with Acting.). It’s not just the writer’s poor word choices, these characters sometimes make really stupid choices, completely unbelievable. At times the thing reads like a YA novel, and not a very good one at that. I almost quit several times but I kept hoping it would get better. It did not. Kind of too bad because the subject is one worth writing about, women’s role as pilots in World War II. The author obviously knew a lot about that, but sadly that doesn’t make you a good writer. I apologize for my irritability, but I really do wonder sometimes how these things get published. “She took a likening to her” ??

Good story badly told

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