• Silver Heart

  • By: J.R. Rain, Matthew S. Cox
  • Narrated by: Virtual Voice
  • Length: 6 hrs and 8 mins
  • 4.0 out of 5 stars (1 rating)

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Silver Heart  By  cover art

Silver Heart

By: J.R. Rain, Matthew S. Cox
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
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This title uses virtual voice narration

Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks

Publisher's summary

True love can withstand distance and time...but can it survive immortality?

Over her more than a century as a mermaid, Alexis Silver never really questioned how her first husband had such an effect on her despite the brief time they had together.

She tried a few relationships with other immortals, though none lasted. She's content to be on her own, chasing the kind of adventures her mortal life would never have offered.

Licinia, suspecting Alex isn’t over Albert, suggests they take a trip to the land once called Ptolemais. Curious to see what magical surprises her dark master friend has up her ethereal sleeves, Alex agrees.

But not long after arriving in Cairo, they hit a snag.

Licinia wants to conduct a ritual. But the only source of rare, magical components won't part with them unless the fate of his missing daughter is discovered.

Alex soon realizes the woman's disappearance is far from ordinary.

In fact, it's downright demonic.

Click BUY NOW or READ FOR FREE to continue the Alexis Silver supernatural mystery series today!

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Better than other books by this author teem up.

The narration has to be among the best ever, but it really depends on well written books that state who is talking. Normally, differentiating one character from another is a major part of the overall skill, but with the even pace and inflection and the slightly robotic sound of the voice there is no mistaking one character from another. This narration sounds like the simulation it is, but it also sounds almost like someone imitating a voice simulation. It is smooth and pleasant and correctly shifts tone for various sentences that old electronic narrators have notably failed. I think I could listen to many many books with it as long as a different base voice is used for "male" or <nationality>.

As for the story, it didn't make five stars, but it is definitely better than the vampire detective series these same authors wrote together. The major flaw to this story is it's weak explanation to various existences. Apparently, "belief" is capable of sealing magic, creating gods and demons, as well as form the laws of physics inside demiplanes. Such whimsical and poor rationality feels reminiscent of a debate club member arguing the case for non-reality... that we don't actually exist, and are but notions of thought on a cosmic wind with the rules of good and bad just as potentially impermanent. One thing for most LitRPG books, because the so often depends on a "system" they don't have quite that weak of a foundation when they lack good arguments. In this case I think at least Matthew Cox has some better rationality in his Vampire Innocent series. Despite that major failing, the story is fun, motivated with justice and civil decency, and case a good cover focus. Enjoy!

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