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Taxes and TARDIS

By: N. R. Walker
Narrated by: Nick J. Russo
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Summary

Brent is a jock; Logan a geek. These men are a world apart. But if opposites attract, maybe it’s the differences between them that make it worth the fight.

Brent Kelly is a laid-back electrician whose only concerns are drinks with friends and which man to bed next. In need of a new accountant to sort out his nightmarish shoebox of tax receipts, he’s referred to Logan Willis.

He doesn’t expect to be intrigued by the science-fiction-loving, geeky guy with dark-rimmed glasses and a blue TARDIS shirt. So his fascination with the soft-spoken Englishman surprises him, and their mutual attraction is completely unexpected. He most certainly never expects to fall in love.

One a jock and the other a geek, both men know the differences between them are vast and could cause problems. But in this opposites-attract erotic drama, maybe it’s the differences between them that make staying together worth the fight.

©2018 N.R. Walker (P)2020 N.R. Walker
  • Unabridged Audiobook
  • Categories: Erotica
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A Great Story

I’ve just read it for third time and I’ll probably read again soon. A real hea story!

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Timey whimey shorty worty

Really nice story about two guys who shouldn't compliment each other but do. I wish it had gone deeper into the social politics of dating people outside your normal social circle and the problems it can cause but I guess this was a lighter take on that theme.
The only thing wrong with this book is that it's too short. I usually don't purchase Audiobooks under 6 hours but it was NR Walker and there's not much other new quality stuff out on the m/m market atm. So I bent my own rules, I'm glad I did.
Talking of quality, I am so damn happy that N.R. Walker is back to using Nick J Russo as a narrator. There was about 5 really good recent Walker releases I had to skip because the narrators were a bit bad. Russo does a fairly good English accent, and as always he performs all the dialogue with conviction, passion and authenticity. There's diction and tonal distinction between every character, and even the narrative is performed with a natural intonation so you don't get a bland monotone recital like so.many other narrators afford the narrative and descriptive passages.
Whovians will appreciate the little nods to Dr Who but they won't detract from the story if you have no knowledge of Time Lords.

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4 people found this helpful