
The Butterfly Project
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Narrated by:
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Amy Melissa Bentley
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Guy Locke
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By:
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Emma Scott
At age 14, Zelda Rossi witnessed the unthinkable, and has spent the last 10 years hardening her heart against the guilt and grief. She channels her pain into her art: a dystopian graphic novel where vigilantes travel back in time to stop heinous crimes - like child abduction - before they happen. Zelda pitches her graphic novel to several big-time comic book publishers in New York City, only to have her hopes crash and burn. Circumstances leave her stranded in an unfamiliar city, and in an embarrassing moment of weakness, she meets a guarded young man with a past he'd do anything to change....
Beckett Copeland spent two years in prison for armed robbery and is now struggling to keep his head above water. A bike messenger by day, he speeds around New York City, riding fast and hard but going nowhere, his criminal record holding him back almost as much as the guilt of his crime.
Zelda and Beckett form a grudging alliance of survival, and in between their stubborn clash of wills, they slowly begin to provide each other with the warmth of forgiveness, healing, and maybe even love.
Contains mature themes.
©2017 Emma Scott (P)2017 TantorListeners also enjoyed...




















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Unfortunately the male narration let it down for me. When you meet Beckett first time through Zelda’s POV with the female narrator he has a New York accent but when it’s narrated from his POV the accent was nowhere to be heard. It really threw me throughout the book as the consistency wasn’t there from the narrators.
Great story let down by Guy Locke’s portrayal of Beckett
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What made the experience of listening to The Butterfly Project the most enjoyable?
I loved the storyline, and the narrators used the right amount of feeling in each situation.Who was your favorite character and why?
Beckett was my favorite because he totally faced his mistakes and tried to make up for them always.What about Amy Melissa Bentley and Guy Locke ’s performance did you like?
The narrators helped me to feel the characters emotions. I liked there being a female and male voice. It helped with POV right away which can sometimes be more confusing with audiobooks than when reading a book.Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
This is a moving book overall so there is more than one moment, but one that really stands out is when Zelda forgives herself.Any additional comments?
Zelda and Beckett have painful pasts. Both are struggling every moment with the emotional baggage. The author does an excellent job of putting the reader in their shoes. I easily understood their actions and feelings. I love these characters and how they don't play romance games. I suppose because they have seen firsthand how real consequences can be, they take life seriously. Both characters are sort of stuck and having trouble moving forward. They help to bring each other around to a better place. I definitely recommend The Butterfly Project. It's entertaining, but it also leaves you thinking. It's not a book that you can just finish and forget.Touching and Thoughtful
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The writing was solid. The relationships felt real. The sex was good, not great - open door, but not raw or dirty or desperate. About 3/4 way through everyone’s emotional issues and physical ailments started to drag down the pacing of the story. It was still good, but much slower. This story is driven far more by the past and pain, than by the future and optimism. The HEA was great, one of those beautiful ‘things work out on all levels’ types.
My issues:
Darlene. Beckett’s drug addict friend from before he met Zelda. His relationship with her was always strictly platonic and both MCs love her. But there is no way in hell that I would give a drug addict a key to my house, the way they did. It made me think that this author has never met a drug addict.
Zelda’s trauma. Everyone grieves in their own way but (based on my understanding of the psyche of 14-year-old girls) the abduction event should have diminished in her mind, not grown. And her treatment of her parents was crap. She went home and torpedoed their family Christmas with her histrionics, then returned to nyc to give all the love she’d withheld from them to Beckett, and the drug addict, and a million other randos she just met. All this while her parents (WHO LOST A CHILD TO A VIOLENCE) pushed through with grace. They remained married, in the same house, and kept living. By the end Zelda’s ‘trauma’ felt like brat behaviour.
The narrators are good. But they read at different speeds, The guy was better at 1.2.
I really liked this
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A journey of love
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And also? Beckett has read John Green's The Fault In Our Stars and when these two book worlds collided at 84%, my heart exploded into an infinity amount of pieces..... I swooned and a tear rolled down my face. "I once read that you fell in love like how you fell asleep: slowly at first and then all at once."
Yes, my friends, all the yeses. If you haven't yet listened to this truly phenomenal book, you simply must.
All the stars!
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Sweet love story!
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So many stars!
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5 stars for twinkling lights
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As an aside: If you hop on over to Amazon.com and open the Kindle sample for this novel, you’ll see a cool artwork for chapter 1. It ties in with the storyline beautifully. It does not appear with the Audible version, but that’s ok because you get excellent narrators instead to bring the story to life. Amy Melissa Bentley and Guy Locke were great as Zelda and Beckett.
I recommend this story together with FOREVER RIGHT NOW (5 stars in my opinion).
While THE BUTTERFLY PROJECT is a stand-alone story, I read FOREVER RIGHT NOW first out of order. FOREVER RIGHT NOW is the story of a secondary character in THE BUTTERFLY PROJECT. Zelda and Beckett make cameo appearances in FOREVER RIGHT NOW and it is very sweet to see where their relationship takes them in the future.
Lovely.
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Great feel good story!
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