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  • The Devil You Know

  • By: Sophia Holloway
  • Narrated by: Matt Addis
  • Length: 10 hrs and 21 mins
  • 4.3 out of 5 stars (98 ratings)

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The Devil You Know

By: Sophia Holloway
Narrated by: Matt Addis
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Summary

The Honourable Catherine Elford - Kitty - is presented with an awful choice. Either she is cast off, penniless, by her stepbrother, or she marries the handsome Earl of Ledbury, who would be perfect were he not a serial womaniser. Ledbury has only ever courted other men’s wives and does not want a wife of his own. However, Kitty’s generous dowry, which will keep him from selling his beloved racehorses, proves too tempting.

Kitty believes her only chance of survival is to make her head rule her heart. For his part, Ledbury has spotted a spark in Kitty and sets out to woo her. But as Kitty begins to succumb to his seduction, Ledbury’s past starts to catch up with them.

©2017 Sophia Holloway (P)2018 Soundings
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What listeners say about The Devil You Know

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  • Overall
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Matt Addis Narration

Great simple story read brilliantly. Loved it from start to finish and probably the fastest I’ve ever listened to. I’ll be listening to more of these.

Lewis

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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Wonderful story and narrative

What a wonderful story made even better by the narrator. Look forward to reading it a second time.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

An honest rake

I thoroughly enjoyed the story which was well paced and kept me interested until the end.
The narrator did a wonderful job.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

A stirring romance

In the style of Georgette Heyer
Clever and witty and at times very emotive I loved it.

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5 people found this helpful

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A passionate performance

Horses and gentlemen. A packet story. Well told. With an interest ing picture of socekty

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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A good new author

Excellent narration of a well written regency novel. What would they would do without post house horse changes at the denouement of these stories. Still an enjoyable book and I hope this writer continues to write others.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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Disappointing

Oh dear, I had my hopes up but this is not a new Georgette Heyer I’m afraid. The characters were very one dimensional and the whole thing sadly lacking in wit and humour. The narrator did his best but not enough light and shade to bring it to life.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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At last! A regency novel that respects...

... Georgette Heyer but doesn't attempt to copy her. Such a relief. I just wish the author had written more of them...

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Fine romance

Witty, intelligent romance with great characters. A little frustrating towards the end. But made me laugh and sigh in turn. Matt Addis is a fantastic narrator. Thoroughly enjoyed his story telling

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Thoroughly enjoyable and marvellously narrated

The Devil You Know is a traditional Regency romance by Sophia Holloway. A confirmed Rake, neither the Earl of Ledbury nor his reluctant new bride are expecting that their marriage of convenience will lead to romance. And yet, through their tentative friendship comes a burgeoning fondness to which both Lord and Lady Ledbury must learn to respond. The Devil You Know follows the newlyweds as they explore married life, their own feelings, and each other.


From the moment I first listened to the sample I was excited to begin this audiobook. The narrator, Matt Addis, brings it to life with such liveliness and vibrancy that I settled into it immediately. The voices for each of the characters felt just right, and he handled the rapid switching between characters with aplomb. His narration was well-paced, emotive, and a joy to listen to. I will definitely seek out more of his work, for his company has been a pleasure, and I could easily have listened to him for twice as long. His voice welcomes the listener into the story, and helps to imbue the characters with personality from the very first page.


It is easy for a traditional Regency to feel staid due to the constraints of the formal language and cultural practices. So much so, in fact, that in contemporary Regencies it has become commonplace to use sexually-explicit storylines as an excuse to cast off the expectations of the era and break down the barriers between the central couple, but this book does not fall into that trap. The characters feel authentically of their time, but the energetic narration makes it a little more accessible. Many traditional Regencies are marketed as ‘sweet’ romances, but despite the lack of bodice-ripping The Devil You Know is far from saccharine. The Earl in particular is a man so unapologetically flawed as to almost be unlikeable, in that infamous Darcy-ish fashion common to rich men in a time when they were indulged a great deal and held accountable for very little. Yet there is a depth to the characters, and a vulnerability to his in particular, that makes him endearing. The talents of the author and of the narrator combine on this score, and I am delighted that I listened to the audiobook version, for the performance was impeccable throughout. It very much felt as though I was listening to the best possible version of the story, brought to life by the joint creative process of author and narrator to breathe life into the characters. I seldom warm to a narrator or new author’s world as swiftly or completely as I found myself settling in to this one, and am very glad to have been introduced to it in time to anticipate the release of the author’s next.


Having once drafted a Regency of my own – abandoned for an inescapable sense of being far too generic – I am always overjoyed to find one which simultaneously manages to feel like an old friend and a fresh discovery, which The Devil You Know achieves. It is undoubtedly a little formulaic, as novels in this genre almost always are, but for many that is part of their appeal. There is a comforting familiarity to each of the most common romantic tropes, and the enjoyment comes from meeting characters whose journey you wish to follow to its expected conclusion. The Devil You Know balances the progression of the relationship between George and Kitty with the required roadblocks and frustrations well, compelling the listener to remain with the story as their happy ending hovers ever so tantalisingly out of reach.


It is this very blend of vitality and formality which made the book so entertaining, and I think that it is simply a Regency which is very much of its time. Just as Heyer’s work differed in tone to Austen’s, so does Holloway’s differ from Heyer’s – but not to its detriment. The author’s familiarity with, and fondness for, the work of the women whose writing paved the way for her own is evident in her novel, and I am happy to have it in my Audible library alongside its notable predecessors. I enjoyed it from start to finish, cancelling the sleep timer more times than I care to admit in order to listen to a little bit more. (As the sound began to fade there was no way I could bring myself to switch off at the end of Chapter 21, as a key character settled into a chair with a gun in his hand; even if it was two in the morning.)


I felt that the book could have done with being an hour longer, to have better explored the tangle which ultimately led to the couple’s reunion, for it did feel a little rushed. I do not begrudge the time that was spent on other things, but did feel that the last hour or so packed rather a lot of important revelations – and realisations – into very little time. I would have liked to see Lord Knowle used a little more subtly in the beginning, for he was a little too obviously up to something nefarious, and it all came together rather abruptly. It did not spoil the story, however, and the other supporting characters were all much more favourably conceived.


It has been a while since I listened to an audiobook that I was either so excited to recommend, or so able to vividly picture the people whom I was most certain would also enjoy it. Anyone who likes Georgette Heyer and is content to listen to a romance which leaves its most sensual scenes in the reader’s imagination is likely to deal very well with the Ledburys. The Devil You Know was a thoroughly gratifying tale of love, friendship, and redemption, with which I was sorry to part at the end and which I know I will return to again.


*I received this audiobook free of charge in exchange for an honest, unbiased review.

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9 people found this helpful