The Same End
The Lamb and the Lion, Book 3
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Narrated by:
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J.F. Harding
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By:
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Gregory Ashe
About this listen
Teancum Leon is pretty sure that if he plays his cards right, he can have it all: his childhood friend and former lover, Ammon Young; his best friend (although Tean is loath to admit it), Jem Berger; and his family. A boyfriend might even be in his future, although he’s having a heck of a time getting a second date with the guys he meets on Prowler.
Then the key suspect in a murder investigation asks to speak with Jem, overturning the precarious balance Tean has worked to maintain. A girl Jem knew in childhood is dead, and the man believed to have killed her was one of Jem’s tormentors at Decker Lake Juvenile Detention Center. Antonio Hidalgo insists he is innocent, and he begs Jem to find the real killer, a man Jem knows very well, the man who masterminded his torture at Decker: Tanner Kimball.
When Jem decides to check out Antonio’s story, Tean insists on helping. Their search takes them into Utah’s high desert, a land of redrock cliffs and hoodoo stones. But everything changes when they find a dead man in a remote canyon. He carries Tanner’s wallet, but the body has been disfigured, making identification difficult - if not impossible. Jem is convinced that the scene has been staged, and he’s determined to find Tanner and make him pay for the bodies in his wake.
Warnings begin piling up from the chief of police, the sheriff, a Bureau of Land Management special agent, even a Utah Highway Patrol trooper. Everyone wants Tean and Jem to understand that it’s in their best interest to go back to Salt Lake before they dig any deeper. A shipment of illegal drugs - several million dollars’ worth - might be the motive. But Tean and Jem begin to suspect that something else is driving events: a motive darker and stronger than money. Learning the truth, though, will take both men on a collision course with the past.
©2021 Gregory Ashe (P)2021 Gregory AsheEnjoyable Story
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Outstanding
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But for me, this book just erred a little too far in the other direction. A bit too bitter. My heart bled for the lovely Jem who shone through this book and I wanted to smack Tean upside the head quite often. Clever and funny though he was.
As usual, the useless detective was useless. I still have no idea how he remained employed and this was definitely a weak link in the chain. And I know real people who persist in very damaging relationships for years but Tean and this monster just wore me down.
I would have liked another book in which Jem really got to live his best life.
Bittersweet
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And what an ending!
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Part of what works is the central couple. Tean is just a guy trying to live his life. He puts up with psychological abuse from his family – mostly around his sexuality – and has been held hostage to the financial demands of his parents. His lover, Ammon, was married to a woman and yet kept stringing Tean along, claiming he was *just* about to leave his wife. And yet never quite did. Tean has found a friend in Jem, and although the grifter is an interesting character, he’s up to his old tricks. Finally, Tean has decided to try dating – and has signed up for Prowler. What happens? He meets great guys, but none ever want a second date. Annoying.
I’m still in love with Jem. He’s trying. In every conceivable way. He’s taking the reading lessons, even though he doesn’t want to. He’s attempting to stay on the straight and narrow, even though society keeps pushing him back to the grift. Finally, he’s annoying to poor Tean who worries about the man and can’t quite seem to get rid of him.
Then another murder takes place. The accused killer demands to see Jem, and Jem is suddenly pulled into a tangled web where he’s forced to face past trauma. Of course, Tean is not just going to let him investigate without helping. They join forces again to solve the mystery.
I admit, I did not see the perpetrator coming. Did not predict the twisted plot. Did not think certain characters would ever get their comeuppance. But everything made sense by the end of the book and the killer(s) got their due. Jem and Tean also found a way to move forward, despite their respective traumas. The ending was brilliant. Oh, and Skippio. Can’t forget the awesome dog.
So the trilogy has come to an end. I’ll miss these two, but I feel they’ve come full circle and the conclusion was perfect. Unlike some of Ashe’s other couples, I feel these guys are good and retirement from crime solving works. Finally, I’ll mention JF Harding. I enjoy his narration style, and I think he did a great job with these books. Definitely worth a listen.
A fitting conclusion to a unique trilogy
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