Ginn Hale’s Wicked Gentlemen creates an interesting world set in what is appears an Edwardian time period, but with a theocratic governmental structure. The universe is so rich with potential, I continue to hope that one day we'll have some back-stories of Prodigal lives. My only 'complaint' is that the author hasn't written more in this universe. The author does a great job of pulling the reader into a unique world by showing us how things work, which is not an easy thing to do with a world this complicated. The parts are sequential rather than concurrent. The book is actually in two parts: the first part is in the first-person POV of Belimai Sykes, a Prodigal descendant of ancient demons, and the second part is in the first-person POV of William Harper, a Captain in the Inquisition. I did end up loving the story the second time around as much as I'd loved it the first. Although I had read the book before, it was so long ago that I'd forgotten many details. He did a fantastic job although at the beginning I heard 'Barker' instead of 'Harper', but that's no fault of Mr Ferguson. I've listed to Antony Ferguson narrator the Barker and Llewelyn series and love his voice, so I was quite happy that he was the narrator for this audiobook. While looking through Audible for new LGBT books, I was surprised to see this book out as an audiobook. Narrator: Antony Ferguson I read this book many years ago when it came out in paperback.
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