

I hope they don't use this narrator for future installments. It is worth reading if you like the series, but not worth listening to. I didn't finish listening to it, I finished the book in print. It isn't worth listening to if you can read it in print instead. She narrates Mac like a much older woman, and all her male characters have the same croaky sound. The New York Times bestselling author of Darkfever and Bloodfever returns to Dublins. I listened to about half of the book and then switched to reading the rest myself. Who would you have cast as narrator instead of Joyce Bean? Some answers to questions from previous books, but more questions arise and are left unanswered. The book is essential to understanding the next in the series. I would recommend the written book over the audio for this installment of the series.

Would you recommend this book to a friend? Why or why not? Surrounded by treachery, her enemies indistinguishable from her allies, she can be certain of only one thing - as All Hallows' Eve approaches, her time is running out. What Mac soon discovers, however, is worse than she had imagined. Now, on a quest to find her sister's killer, she is a major player in a deadly game, but with one great advantage: she knows how to find the one thing Fae and human alike are willing to kill for - the Sinsar Dubh, an ancient book of magic so dark it corrupts anyone who touches it. In Faefever, Karen Marie Moning returns to the shadowy Dublin Otherworld in an undeniably sexy novel her fans are feverish for.Ĭhanged by the choices she made in order to survive, Mac no longer is the naïve, idealistic, and glamorous girl newly arrived in Dublin. Karen Marie Moning's "Fever" series is a coast-to-coast hit! The first two titles in this national best-selling series, Darkfever and Bloodfever, appeared on the New York Times, USA Today, and Publishers Weekly best-seller lists.
