The Raven

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The Raven audiobook

Hi, are you looking for The Raven audiobook? If yes, you are in the right place! ✅ scroll down to Audio player section bellow, you will find the audio of this book. Right below are top 5 reviews and comments from audiences for this book. Hope you love it!!!.

 

Review #1

The Raven audiobook free

I had a love/hate relationship with this book. I love Sylvain Reynard as an author and wanted to love this new series but it was a leap. One I’m not sure I can cross.

This story is both a departure and a link to Reynard’s first series which follows the romance of Gabriel and Julianna. That series was a straight up romance. This is part supernatural, part investigative/mystery, part action/drama with some romance thrown in. The Raven is the first book in the Florentine series. The beginning of The Raven starts 2 years after the end of the Gabriel Series. This creates a plot hole that I find problematic but it’s not obvious if you have not read The Prince, novella which acts as a bridge between the two series.

The story is very slow in the beginning. At one point I became so bored I put the book away and considered not finishing it. Even Reynard’s exceptional writing couldn’t hold my attention. The book focuses mainly on a character referred to only as The Prince, the leader of a group of vampires in Florence. The beginning of the book is mostly devoted to explaining the governmental structure of the vampire world and several story arcs. The two main characters don’t really meet each other until about the halfway point, which sets off an awkward love/hate relationship between them. They meet prior to that but the POV shift between the chapters results in time gaps for the reader which makes it harder to follow some of the storylines.

I love the way the vampires are done in this book. Reynard retains much of the traditional lore with a few twists which can be explained as the vampires encouraging an over exaggeration of their abilities in order to scare the humans into not seeking them out. Considering that this came out around the same time or shortly after a series well known for it’s “sparkling vampires” I was glad to see that Reynard did not follow that path. The Prince’s age grants him more abilities than some of the others as he has had more exposure to the items and has built up a resistance which keeps the vampire race from being one dimensional. The Prince’s character ranges from focused violence to awkwardly blunt due to inexperience, or maybe his lack of a need to be gentle, to tender and touching. Despite the extensive range, each element reads as believable.

If you are wondering where the detailed description of the Raven is in this review, then please note that she is mentioned about as much in this review as she is in the book. The main story arc of this book is not the romance between The Prince and Raven. That doesn’t start until the second half of the book as a secondary story arc. There are some very touching and well written sexual encounters between the two, but as a character, she’s only there to help the main plot which involves several groups trying to unseat the Prince from his throne while he seeks vengeance for a crime that happened centuries earlier. We only see things from her POV when there isn’t anything of interest going on in the Prince’s main story arc, or if it’s needed for the advancement of the main story arc.

What I didn’t care for was the extensive governmental system which took half of the book to explain. I know that part of this is because I thought I was reading a romance, not a government based thriller. There is also an unrealistic back and forth as the Prince both saves Raven and condemns her. For someone who has survived thousands of years and keeps his secrets close he really screws up over and over with Raven by continually putting her, and himself, in danger from not only other vampires but also from the human police and a potentially giving her a mental disorder.

The tediously slow start and the fact that the story, despite being titled Raven, is actually about the Prince I might have been able to forgive except for one major issue. The story doesn’t end. It literally stops in the middle and requires the purchase of the second book to not only finish the main story arc but the secondary storylines as well. Having read the blurbs for the second and third books in this series, it’s quite likely that the second book also does not resolve the story and instead requires the purchase of the third book as well.

I won’t be purchasing the next two books in the series because I have major issues with series that forces readers to buy multiple books in order to finish one story arc let alone 2 or 3.

 

Review #2

The Raven audiobook streamming online

“Cassita vulneratus”

Reynards centuries-old Machiavellian Prince of Florence finds himself drawn to an innocent, raven-haired beauty whose life he saves when shes viciously assaulted for intervening in the senseless beating of a homeless man. He craves her intelligence, her protectiveness, and he wants her as a companion, a lover. Someone he can talk about art and beauty with. But can he risk leading her into his dark underworld where vampires have thrived for centuries and whose inhabitants will kill to keep their secrets?

Once again, Reynard uses his knowledge of Renaissance art, history and architecture, as well as his love of Italy, to create a well-written, passionate story full of supernatural beings in THE RAVEN . He has said he was inspired by the poet Apuleiuss account of the love affair between Cupid and Psyche while writing the seriesa poem that is not very well known, but that he makes several references to throughout the book.

The Princeaka William Yorkaka William Maletwas the eldest son of a noble Norman family during the thirteenth century and a novice in the Dominican order when he was transformed into a vampire. And hes been in possession of the principality of Florence since the fourteenth century. Part of the story focuses on Williams stolen Botticelli illustrations and his desire to exact revenge upon Professor Gabriel Emerson who purchased the illustrations from a prominent Swiss family in a private sale, while the majority revolves around his desire for Raven Wooda disabled American art restorer working at the Uffizi Gallery in Florence. But the story isnt completely about renaissance art, revenge and an unconventional love affair. Human hunters are stalking and killing older vampires in Florence and draining them of their valuable blood, while war brews within the principality to unseat William from his throne.

 

Review #3

Audiobook The Raven by Sylvain Reynard

I loved this book couldn’t put it down. Raven Wood carries a cane because she limps when she walks because of something that happened to her when she was a child and she works at the Uffizi Gallery restoring paintings. One night Raven was walking home after a party when she saw three men hurting a homeless man, but when she tried to intervene they started to attack her, but then suddenly someone came to help her and took her away. After a week later Raven woke up in her bed not remembering anything and she noticed that her body was different. William York is a centurie old unhuman and he can’t stop looking after Raven, but when something tries to get her William comes and takes her to his home and tells her what he really is. After spending time together Raven tells him that she loves him, but when he tells her that he can’t love her she leaves him with a broken heart. After a month of not seeing each other Raven enters her home after attending her birthday party and is surprise to see William waiting for her. William wants to give her a birthday present but before he does he tells her how he really feels about her.

 

Review #4

Audio The Raven narrated by John Michael Morgan

I was given a copy of this book to read and review for Wicked Reads.

I love the sense of place and the sense of history in Sylvain Reynards writing and the way he captures Florence in this story is magnificent. Even as the centuries and characters blur, the city and its art remain fixed and somehow separate from time.

There are many familiar vampire tropes in this story. The urban fantasy element of the series isnt its strength. Very little of the worldbuilding is original and women are often reduced to tired virgin/whore/crone stereotypes.

It took me a while to like Raven. For someone with a PhD tasked with restoring some of the worlds most precious art, her self confidence is awful and her view of herself and her disability feels unnecessarily reductionist. I enjoyed her interactions with William and I liked the way she became more confident as the story progressed. Shes possibly too much of a vulnerable victim for me at times but Ill withhold judgement until I finish the series.

William is a character full of contrasts. I enjoyed the conflicting elements of good and evil in the Florentine prince. Hes an intense character and Im still not certain I understand his motivations. He is a more interesting character than Raven but Id like to see some power rebalance in the next books so they feel more like a matched pair than hunter and prey.

I loved the city and the art in this story. I love the authors writing style. Im not certain about the vampire lore or the relationship between Raven and William but Im engaged enough that I want to immediately download the next book in this series.

 

Review #5

Free audio The Raven – in the audio player below

I will begin this review with; Im not a supernatural reader. I dont normally finish reading this type of novel.
So its all credit to Mr Reynards unique use of prose that I completed The Raven.

Im not going to give any spoilers.

The novel is set in Florence and the Uffizi Gallery where the Emersons Botticelli illustrations are on display. These illustration are stolen.
Raven becomes a suspect when she disappears for a week recovering from a brutal attack. She was close to death when The Prince found her.
The Prince is the head of the supernatural underground world of Florence where vampires only use humans not save them.
The Prince finds himself attracted to Raven.

Plot/Story: Romance intertwined into the bloody world of vampires as well as mystery and intrigue. 3 Stars

Characters: Strong, interesting courageous.
Raven is independent with a caring side to her nature that wants to save the world
whereas the Prince has superior supernatural powers and intelligence within his vampire world.
However he believes in violence and death. 4 Stars

Writing style: Easy to read and follow. Mr Reynards captivating use of prose seduces the reader into the
story. 4 Stars

Finally this is a story of a supernatural world intertwined with romance set in Florence with references to the Italian Renaissance.
The author has considerable knowledge of the art works of Botticelli, Primavera, Birth of Venus. Descriptions of these painters and modern explanations are entwined along with the story of Cupid and Psyche.
In a nut shell this story will appeal to many readers, those who like the Italian Renaissance, those who like romance and finally those who like vampires.
Mr Reynards creative eloquent writing is not to be missed.

I wanted to award 3.5 stars because of the supernatural element.

 

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