Tuesday, January 30, 2018

The Last Thing He Needs written by J.H. Knight narrated by Michael Stellman | Tams Audiobook Review & #giveaway @Dreamspinners




Tommy O'Shea is raising his seven younger brothers and sisters without any help from his drug-abusing father and stepmother. Since he was 15 years old, he's managed to keep the children fed and out of foster care. It takes up every ounce of his energy, and the last thing he needs is romance complicating his life further.

Rookie cop Bobby McAlister doesn't belong in Tommy's harsh world, but Tommy can't push him out. As their unlikely friendship turns into a tentative relationship, they weather the daily storm of Tommy's life with a lot of laughs and more than a few arguments.
Tommy isn't used to trusting outsiders, and he's never asked for help in his life. But when a tragedy strikes the O'Shea family and threatens everything he's fought for, he'll have to learn to do both to recover from the brutal hit.
©2014 J. H. Knight (P)2015 Dreamspinner Press


Tams eBook review August 2014

At just twenty something years old, Tommy O’Shea is the primary caretaker for his seven younger siblings. His father is a drunk, his stepmonster an addict, so much so that they steal from the own children in order to feed their habits. Tommy and the next oldest Colleen work multiple jobs just to keep food on the table and the lights on. It’s second nature to Tommy to take care of his brother’s and sister’s. He’s determined to keep them together and out of foster care, and he’ll seriously injure anyone that thinks otherwise.

Tommy has known Officer Bobby McAlister since they were kids, and now that they are older, Bobby has become a guardian angel of sorts. He’s kept Tommy out of jail on more than one occasion, and now he’s stepping up and helping Tommy at home with the kids as well. As much as Tommy wants more from the blonde haired young cop, he doesn’t want to expose Bobby to the harsh reality that is his world. And he’s not even certain that Bobby is gay. A chance meeting at a gay bar answers that question, and sets in motion a series of events that will change the O’Shea families lives forever.

Bobby is as determined to be a part of Tommy’s life as Tommy is to run him off. The two fight and argue and say hurtful things in the heat of the moment. But Bobby never gives up on Tommy or the kids. While their arguments made my teeth grate at times, there was a comical madness to them as well that rooted them in reality. The way they loved just as fiercely as they fought painted them as three dimensional characters giving them more depth. And I loved that they could just kiss each other for hours. Every time they kissed, it was like they kissed each other a different way, I liked that variety from the author.

This book was a beautiful tragedy full of emotional ups and downs. My heart broke for Tommy and what he had to go through to try and keep his family together. For those kids who were saddled with the most disgusting and worthless parents, I mean who tries to steal their one year old twins Christmas presents so they can sell them for drugs?! For Bobby and Tommy and the toll it took on them both as a couple and as individuals. But I loved watching their relationship slowly unfold, from friends to lovers to a family. And it all progressed over time, it didn’t happen overnight. Tommy was recklessly determined to spend his life alone, the martyr that gave it all up to raise those kids. Sometimes though, you really can have it all, or at least all that you are meant to have.

Fans of real world stories and my fellow hopeless romantics are going to love this one. Add to that the snarky sense of humor these two guys have and that makes this a must read dramady! 

Tams Audiobook review January 2018

It's always a joy to listen to a book I've read and feel like it's a whole new story. This book has always been a favorite for me, I've read it multiple times, and I'll likely listen to the audio more than once as well. Micheal Stellman is young and vibrant and he brings that vibrancy to the stories he reads. His tones and nuances are subtle enough that they flow well within the story, but you always know when it's a different character. 

This is a book you want in your library, it will break your heart and then slowly put the pieces back together with duct tape and bailing wire. At the end of the day it may be mixmatched but it's love none the less. 

Coffee addict, fledgling author, and unpaid chauffeur. J.H. Knight has been writing love stories since the second grade. When she’s not catering to the whims of her imaginary friends (whom she sometimes refers to as “characters”), she’s usually found driving her four children all over the planet, working on a school project, or saying things like “Not until your homework is done!” A Pacific Northwest native, she loves the outdoors in every season whether she’s in the city, in the mountains, or building sloppy sandcastles with her kids on the beach. On her best days, she’s cuddled up with a good book, and on her worst days she’s tearing her hair out as she tries to decide if her sentence needs a comma or a semi-colon. She gratefully bows down in awe of editors, since she usually gets it wrong.

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4 comments:

  1. Thank you for the review!

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  2. Thanks for the good review, Cat. I'll have to look into this. I've not been one to re-read, much less listen to a book I read. But I have read a number of plays I've seen, and understand what you mean about the different media adding an extra quality to it. - Purple Reader,
    TheWrote [at] aol [dot] com

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  3. Aw, those heartbreaking stories really have a way of staying with us long after we read them. Enjoyed getting the chance to learn about this book as well as about the author, especially since I’m also a PNW native & current dweller. :D

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