The Harmony Divide: Never Alone
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Narrated by:
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Whitney Dorr
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By:
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Dominick Gerard
About this listen
Two minds, one body, and a secret so terrible one woman may choose to die rather than know her own past.
Christine locked away her painful past and Jenn has been forced inside her mind to help unlock it. Their shared physical body, and the mysterious facility they wake up in, is under attack by brutal invading soldiers and the key to their survival is sealed away inside Christine’s self-inflicted memory block. There’s a race against time to see if Jenn’s compassion and visions of her own past will be enough to heal Christine’s mental trauma before the soldiers destroy them.
What Christine and Jenn discover along the way changes their lives, and the world, forever.
Never Alone is book one of an emotionally moving and thrilling modern-day sci-fi series featuring two powerful female leads.
©2019 Dominick Gerard (P)2019 Dominick GerardWhat listeners say about The Harmony Divide: Never Alone
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- Harry Frost
- 17-09-19
Worth a listen: intriguing plot, well-performed.
Really interesting concept, with a solid twist that I didn't see coming. Competent writing that kept me listening, with some really moving moments, and excitement, too. Interestingly, the first two hours or so is a very different story to what comes after, so if you're feeling the lack of sci-fi/fantasy elements for the first section (which could perhaps do with a small edit down), hang on! Only thing to note against your own preferences is that this is a very tightly-focused story, not a sweeping space-opera type; more of a psychological thriller with SFF setting.
The narrator is extremely clear and the sound quality is good and consistent. She puts great emotion into the exchanges and has a good 'working cadence' that doesn't repeat too much. There's some good accent work in places, and though delineation could be clearer (male characters, different female characters), the narrator wisely doesn't try anything too far out of her natural range, so immersion remains intact. Good work.
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