

Sasha's life is on the brink of changing beyond all recognition in this bittersweet lesbian romantic comedy. Meddling might have brought Jac and Sasha together, but fate has plans of its own. She helps run an annual scriptwriting competition in search of new talent and projects for her company to produce. Until the well-meaning but meddlesome women in her life, Fleur and Bobbi, team up and enter Sasha into a writing competition with the potential to change her life.įilm producer and director Jac Kensington has the career she's spent thirty years honing to perfection, with little thought to her personal life. Well, okay, maybe not happy, but she's content. Fans of Bramhall's Norfolk series will find Lost for Words a much lighter read and fans of Just My Luck will likely feel right at home in this story with Bramhall letting loose her sense of humor once again and pulling the reader into this highly entertaining and satisfying book. She works as a massage therapist, and spends all her time with her best friend, Bobbi. Who's she kidding? She lives at home with her aging mother, Fleur. Fulfilling career, loving family, great friends, and. However the accents, unlike the many LGBT+ audiobooks with cheap production values and are simply spoken in the narrator's voice, makes for very clear listening with no need to keep winding back to work out who is speaking. The narrator is good at differentiating characters by using different accents even though even though some of these are cringe worthy. It is a real shame because Andrea Bramhall is a good writer who always includes new and interesting plot lines in her work and I always look forward to listening to her audiobooks. Because of the lack of a sequel the ending is a massive let down and spoils this book. So, as listeners, we are left waiting for something that will never come.

Andrea Bramhall was obviously intending to publish a sequel but by 2021, so far as I can see, she has not done. A major flaw of this 2012 book, however, is that the story ends on a cliffhanger and leaves the listener hanging in mid air.
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The characters are interesting and well constructed too although Andrea Bramhall does not achieve the poignancy and depth of her later novels. It held my interest throughout and avoids the repetitive semi-literate sentence construction, descriptions of clothes, sex and other padding that marrs many other lesbian love stories. This early book is not Andrea Bramhall at her best but is very enjoyable nevertheless. Lesbian thriller includes a touching love story
