Audiobook Review: Tapping the Billionaire (Billionaire Bad Boys, #1). ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Tapping the Billionaire by Max Monroe

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Blind dates? Online dating profiles? Been there, done that.

Georgia Cummings has zero luck with dating, and the era of the Internet is not her friend. No matter how fast she runs, how many corners she turns, she can’t find her way out of this weird, alternate universe where men think dick pics are a replacement for small talk and getting to know a girl. One more crotch selfie and she might write men off for good.

But why can’t she stop fantasizing about him?

Kline Brooks is the quintessential billionaire bad boy – dark, styled, short hair, muscles for days, and a panty-dropping smile.

Except he isn’t. As his employee, he won’t touch her with a 10-foot pole. And she won’t touch him either. Too bad their hormones missed the memo.

Tapping the Billionaire

I liked the story, but not the narration!




The following ratings are out of 5:
Romance: 💙❤️💚💜
Steam: 🔥🔥🔥
Story/Plot: 📕📗📘📙
World building: 🌏🌍🌏
Character development: 😊😘😟
Narration: 🎙🎙
Narration Type: Dual Narration

The Hero: Kline Brooks – he is the definition of billionaire bad boy. Tall, handsome, fit and muscular, he loves women and is charming as all get out. He also knows the value of his assets. He knows he can please a woman. He says what he means and means what he says. He prefers monogamy to serial dating, though his focus has been on his company. He has built his fortune with a dating website.

The heroine: Georgia Cummings – she is the director of marketing at Brooks Media. Tap Next is owned by Brooks Media and is the latest and greatest dating app. All employees of Brooks Media had to set up a profile on Tap Next. Georgia found that the app is a great way to do research, but she is sick of all the dick pics she has been getting.

The Story: Both Georgia and Kline were kind of fed up with parts of their lives. They had nothing special to get up in the morning for. Though both of them loved their jobs, they were kind of sick of some of the stupid people that took up so much space in the world.

I have read and/or listened to more than a few Max Monroe books before and really liked most of them. I liked the concept of this one but wasn’t fond of the narration from the start. I also thought some of the supporting characters were more caricature than character, I think the narration exaggerated that fact even more than the writing.

This audiobook was done in dual points of view via dual narration. It was narrated by Eric Michael Summerer and C.J. Bloom. C.J. has a clear, sarcastic-sounding voice and Eric has a deep voice that is bright and clear. Both of these narrators sound good for a romantic comedy though there was something I didn’t like about the narration. I think it was because they both sounded like they were overacting. I like it to sound more natural.

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