



Shutout: A Seattle Sockeyes Puck Brothers Novel
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3.9 • 73 Ratings
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- $7.99
Publisher Description
Easton:
Hockey isn’t forever.
The money, excitement, and glory of being a professional hockey player meant more to me than a family, a home, and a forever. Another man has my forever, and I have hockey. I thought making the big bucks and playing against the best in the world would feel better than this. Instead I’m empty and hollow, like a big piece of my heart was hacked off. There's something missing. Something big. Something I can never get back.
Caroline:
I loved him, but he wasn’t the love of my life.
My husband died too young, too suddenly, too tragically. I was unprepared with no education, no job skills, and no future plans. When a DNA test reveals my twins' true parentage, I have no choice but to do the right thing. I turn to the one man who’d turned his back on me all those years ago.
I'd been shutout from his life, and I'd shut him out from mine. Can two strangers make a family? Do we have what it takes to forgive and move on?
Customer Reviews
I liked it
Storyline was good. Enjoyed the two narrators.
The female character got on my nerves a time or two with her back and forth with what she wanted.
Trying to be controlling of the situation when he was trying to work with her. He could have been a real pain and put her in a bad situation with his position and money.
Glad she came to her senses and finally let things be the way they were meant to be.
He did not redeem himself.
I left the male lead was selfish and never considered how his actions affected other people. He just wanted his way no matter the consequences. He didn’t think his actions now or then had negative consequences on the woman he “loved.”
Decent audio book
I really went back and forth with this book. It definitely made me feel something’s although it wasn’t always nice romance feelings. I wasn’t crazy about how the co-parenting went throughout most of this book. I also kept screaming in my head to get the poor kids some dang counseling after losing their father. There were a few times I was really tempted to just stop listening, but ended up finishing because I can’t leave a book unfinished. I’m really not sure if it was bad writing, or good writing on a hard topic. The two narrators did a good job though. No weird inflections or pauses. I don’t think I’d pay for the next in the series, but this one as a freebie was decent.