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∎ PDF Free The Witness (Audible Audio Edition) Sandra Brown Joyce Bean Brilliance Audio Books

The Witness (Audible Audio Edition) Sandra Brown Joyce Bean Brilliance Audio Books



Download As PDF : The Witness (Audible Audio Edition) Sandra Brown Joyce Bean Brilliance Audio Books

Download PDF  The Witness (Audible Audio Edition) Sandra Brown Joyce Bean Brilliance Audio Books

Kendall Deaton pulls herself and her baby out of a wrecked car, and a mixture of courage and fear gets her to the top of a ravine, where she flags down help. But she doesn't dare reveal her true identity to the authorities. Instead, she plans her immediate escape. Her perilous flight begins.

The best public defender in Prosper, South Carolina, Kendall had stumbled upon the town's chilling secret - and her marriage to one of the town's most powerful men has become a living hell. Now Kendall is a terrified mother trying to save her child's life...a reluctant witness who knows too much about an insidious evil...and a woman surrounded by forces that will stop at nothing to protect what is "theirs".


The Witness (Audible Audio Edition) Sandra Brown Joyce Bean Brilliance Audio Books

This was only the second book of Sandra Brown's I read. I loved the first one, Friction. I think she is an excellent writer at plotting and story telling. But this book was awful. Gratuitous and unnecessary violence and gore which was so shocking and unexpected.. I ended up skipping over many sections because they were too awful to read. I don't know how Sandra Brown thought this one up in her writer's mind but skip it unless you like blood and guts and characters that no one can believe.

Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 13 hours and 20 minutes
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher Brilliance Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date December 1, 2009
  • Language English, English
  • ASIN B002ZF0Z7Q

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The Witness (Audible Audio Edition) Sandra Brown Joyce Bean Brilliance Audio Books Reviews


After reading a couple of other books by this author, I decided to give this one a try. It is way beyond fiction, it is unbelievably down right stupid. The main character Kendall Deaton (an assumed identity to land a job) is on the run with her 3-month old baby who practically slept thru the entire book despite the fact that they are being chased by her murderous ex-husband & father-in-law who are in a brotherhood similar to the KKK. Her best friend is a nymphomaniac who will bed any man that comes near her. Sadly I don't know how these 2 ladies fared at the end of the book, I couldn't take it anymore and didn't finish it. Some of the best fiction I have ever read makes you believe or want to believe the story really happened. I wouldn't wish this story on anyone.
Okay. So when I bought this book, I didn't realize it was as old as it was. I think it may have been written in the 1990s, but what I was reading sounded more like the 1970s. The sexism and the racism are completely blown out of proportion. I will concede that a few people, even well-respected people in a southern town in the 1990s may have been discreetly bigoted. But in this town everyone is openly and unabashedly racist and sexist to the point where they all conspire together to make sure women stay in the home and blacks only work menial jobs. I haven't read the whole book yet, so that is not a spoiler, just the general feeling I get from the dialogue. From the plot synopsis, however, I do know that the town is supposed to have a secret and it has something to do with the antiquated behavior of the citizens. Okay, so that explains the behavior of the people of Prosper, but anyone from out of town would not be so easily accepting of their behavior. The heroine thinks it's perfectly normal that the whole town is in an uproar over a female attorney. I'm not buying it. And she is not allowed to invite black people to her wedding. The N word is used by public officials in the course of duty with no repercussions. Battered wives deserved what they get. It is impossible to rape your wife because she is obligated to have sex with you... It goes on and on. It's very melodramatic and not realistic for that time for an entire town's behavior.
So, why does the heroine just act like this behavior may not be admirable, but it is par for the course? And why does she marry her husband? Did she know anything about him before saying,"I do"? Did she just marry him for his looks? A little ways into the book, it is apparent that on every single level the heroine and her husband disagree. It even says that they met because he wrote an editorial about how a woman could not handle the job she had. How can you marry someone like that? And then be shocked that he's total scum? None of this book made sense to me and it just didn't jibe with the time period. Sandra Brown must have a warped view of the world.
I listened to the abridged audio recording of this book, and it was pretty awful. I am guessing they just cut out too much to make it abridged, and it lost a lot of the meaning. It felt rushed, and in some spots I think even some important information had been left out. I don't think the way the audiobook was compiled helped any. There wasn't any segue between chapters (even just the narrator saying "Three"), and it always took me a minute to figure out who was talking, where they were and when the narration was taking place.

I'm not choosy when it comes to books, but I would not recommend this.
First things first This book is not new, it's twenty years old, and and if you enjoy Brown's newer books this one might be a tough pill to swallow as it was for me. She has gotten much better with time, at least in providing a suspense story you don't roll your eyes for every five minutes.

I just could not suspend disbelief long enough to enjoy this book. Kendall gets rescued and taken directly to the hospital -- but somewhere in there she managed to hide a large amount of money and a weapon along the way that shows up later? She moved to a town where every male is completely chauvinistic, quietly runs over any decision she makes, and decides to marry one of the very people who questioned her ability to do her job because she was a woman -- but is then surprised when he insults her best friend and starts putting down her abilities because she's a woman again? She's with our hero all of five days and decides she loves him? And the villain's whole thread was just completely over the top. Honestly the portrayal of nearly all of the men in this book was a bit insulting to men.. >.>

I was really confused at the quality of this considering how much I've enjoyed Brown's most recent books, until I ran into a passage where the hero declares he was born in '56 and went to look up the original publishing date (1996). This was probably comparably really good then, and I can see why people would have some nostalgia for it, but reading it for the first time in 2016 did not go over well.
This was only the second book of Sandra Brown's I read. I loved the first one, Friction. I think she is an excellent writer at plotting and story telling. But this book was awful. Gratuitous and unnecessary violence and gore which was so shocking and unexpected.. I ended up skipping over many sections because they were too awful to read. I don't know how Sandra Brown thought this one up in her writer's mind but skip it unless you like blood and guts and characters that no one can believe.
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