Preview
  • Salt Redux: Sequel to Salt Bride

  • Salt Hendon, Book 2
  • By: Lucinda Brant
  • Narrated by: Marian Hussey
  • Length: 12 hrs
  • 4.4 out of 5 stars (204 ratings)

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Salt Redux: Sequel to Salt Bride

By: Lucinda Brant
Narrated by: Marian Hussey
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Publisher's summary

2013 Readers' Favorite International Book Awards Medal Winner

Jane and Salt-four years of happily ever after...Sir Antony Templestowe-four years of exile...Lady Caroline-four years of heartache... Diana St. John-four years plotting revenge...The time has come...

How does a brother cope with life knowing his sister is a murderess? How can a nobleman have the life he has always wanted when a lurking evil consumes his thoughts and haunts his dreams? What will it take for good to triumph over evil? For listeners who enjoyed Salt Bride, the story continues...Salt Hendon series, Book 2

Character-driven romantic suspense. Non explicit (mild sensuality).

©2013 Lucinda Brant (P)2014 Lucinda Brant
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What listeners say about Salt Redux: Sequel to Salt Bride

Average customer ratings
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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Love it!

Any additional comments?

After listening to book one--the Salt Bride--this is a must. Again, the narrator spoke clearly and put much of herself into the story. having read both books and all of Lucinda's books --and I mean ALL of them-- listening to the story is a great way to relive they stories of this amazing family. Whether you read the book or listen to them, it is a must Lucinda will never leave you disappointed with her storiesl

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1 person found this helpful

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

Please, may we have some more?

I've just finished listening to Salt Bride and Salt Redux for the umpteenth time, and I've loved it, again! A brilliant idea just came to me: Maybe the characters from the Salt books could appear in future Alec Halsey books. They all belong to the same small society, after all. Perhaps diplomatist Tony (from Salt) could become involved in a Halsey mystery? Or younger characters from each series could get married?
As you can see, I LOVE this author's books.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    3 out of 5 stars

Not as good as the first....

Have you ever read a sequel and realized that it should of ended with the first book. Yeah this book is like that. I think the story should of ended with the first book. It was an ok listen.

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1 person found this helpful

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

Credit worthy

Just as good as the first book. Enjoyed re listen So good to curl up to with a good cup of tea

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1 person found this helpful

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

AS Good as the First!

Love her writing and the narration. Would recommend for sure. Great story - want more.

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1 person found this helpful

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

A decent story, however, narrator could be better

I enjoyed these two books...I laughed and chuckled quite a bit. The narrator was just okay for me. She read very fast at some points and her voice tone tended to grate on my nerves. She is not the worse but,she is not the best I've heard either. That being said, the series has kept me amused and entertained. For this reason, I do recommend it is worth a credit.

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

Vicious Villain

How can you not like a story with an irredeemable, unconscionable, psycho villain? The story was driven by and tension created by Diana’s heinous behavior. I won’t go into her plotting as anticipating what is coming next and waiting to find out if her plans for destruction succeed is part of the fun. On the down side the ubiquitous prolonging of the sharing of critical information makes for an unnecessarily long story causing the loss of momentum and diluting the tension. A tighter storyline with plausible reactions to Diana’s obvious lies would have provided some welcome conflict and created scenarios for suspense. The family’s interactions with the children, parrot, and pug provides some light amusement. I would recommend this book to readers/listeners who enjoy long storylines focusing on how one person can take over the lives of others. Also to those who like particularly vile villains this story won’t disappoint and this is really all the book has to offer other than a very good narration.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    5 out of 5 stars

What do you call an audio "page turner?"Salt Redux

A few months ago, I noticed that some of my Goodreads friends were reading and loving this book (and its predecessor Salt Bride), which combines my two favorite fiction genres – historical romance and mystery. So when the chance came to review this audiobook, I eagerly jumped in, and I have now become a huge Lucinda Brant fan.

Salt Bride featured the Magnus Sinclair, fifth Earl of Salt Hendon, and his reluctant bride, Jane Despard. They were plagued by the evil machinations of Salt’s cousin Diana, Lady St. John, a widow whose son is Salt’s heir, and a more diabolical villainess would be hard to imagine. Her interference kept Salt and Jane apart for four years, and she was determined to ruin their marriage. In the end, she was carried away, kicking and screaming in the hands of burly footmen, to private imprisonment in a far away Welsh castle.

Lord Salt’s closest friend is Diana’s brother, Sir Antony Templestowe. After Diana’s disgrace, Tony took himself off to St. Petersburg, where he has overcome his fondness for the bottle and become a successful diplomat. Four years later, however, Diana has escaped and Tony rushes back to London to find her. She’s hiding in plain sight at Antony’s townhouse, telling everyone that she has been touring the Continent and running up bills on Tony’s credit. She has engaged a “companion” and planted a spy in Salt’s home, both of whom rather credulously believe that Diana is the true Countess of Salt Hendon and Jane is a brazen usurper. With their help, she plans to pull off an intricate plan to make herself personally and politically indispensable to Salt.

The romance here, which is really secondary to the intrigue, involves Tony and Salt’s younger sister, Lady Caroline Aldershot. They were in love before Tony went away, but his drink-fueled outrageous behavior and Caroline’s immaturity kept them apart. Caroline is widowed after being unhappily married to another man. Tony wastes no time in proposing marriage and she turns him down in the classic “I’m not worthy” style of a romance heroine, but you know that won’t last. Tony makes for an incredibly appealing hero, but I found Caro just a tad annoying. Nevertheless, their love story is engaging.

The book largely revolves around Diana’s plans for revenge, as Tony and Salt try to get her out of the way without causing a scandal that would expose Diana’s heinous crimes and forever taint both of their families. Ending her life would be the easiest way, and well deserved, but neither one has the stomach for that. It would be spoilerish to go further into the details of the plot, and I’m not sure that I have enough space in this review to sum it all up anyway. It’s a complex story.

Lucinda Brant is a very good storyteller, and this the tale is multi-layered with threads from the past brought seamlessly into the present. The writing is excellent, albeit occasionally interspersed with modernisms. Her impressive knowledge of the Georgian era and her attention to detail make the people and places come vividly into focus. The characters’ clothing, their houses, and their surroundings are lushly described. Her description of the gifts Tony brings back from Russia is so exquisite that the reader longs to see these treasures. Well – just visit the author’s Pinterest page and there they are! Many authors are supplementing their books with Pinterest images these days, but Ms Brant’s page is the best that I’ve encountered.

Marian Hussey, a new-to-me narrator, does an excellent job. Her narrative voice is low and quite cultured, but she very ably portrays men and women of all ages and classes. She especially excels in voicing the vile Diana, veering between her persona as a respectable society widow and the privately expressed hatred that reveals her to be a true sociopath. When the action gets almost unbearably suspenseful, she maintains an even pace and does not use her voice to add unnecessarily to the drama.

There are so many things that I loved about this book that I’ll just have to give a short list. There is Tony’s obsession with tea and his insistence upon following his own elaborate brewing ritual, along with his platoon of Russian-speaking servants whose job is not only to serve but to keep him from succumbing to the siren call of wine. Caroline tries to fill the empty spot in her heart with devotion to her young step-daughter as well as her varied menagerie of pets. Salt and Jane and their children do not just make cameo appearances, as happens in many sequels, but are present throughout and integral to the story. Tony and Salt are men of their time, but their sincere, often halting, efforts to rebuilt their life-long friendship and protect their families are touching. But really, Diana St. John somewhat steals the show. Her mixture of madness, intelligence, charm, and determination make her a walking time bomb ready to ruin the lives of anyone – man, woman, or child – who stands in her way.

I listened to this book before reading Salt Bride, but to fully appreciate the story I recommend that both be read in order. I don’t know what to call the audiobook equivalent of a “page turner,” but Salt Redux is exactly that.

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7 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    5 out of 5 stars

Another excellent book from Lucinda Brant

What made the experience of listening to Salt Redux: Sequel to Salt Bride the most enjoyable?

I recognized characters from Salt Bride.The story was fast-paced yet unpredictable.It evokes many emotions....a lot of tension.Great attention to detail.

What other book might you compare Salt Redux: Sequel to Salt Bride to and why?

I can honestly think of no comparable book.........totally individual.

Have you listened to any of Marian Hussey’s other performances before? How does this one compare?

I have listened to Marian Hussey before and now she is one of my favourites.I have checked which books she has narrated so I can purchase.What I like is that she has a 'natural' accent....unforced .....unlike many others. Great, believable characters, excellent dialects.

Any additional comments?

Impatiently awaiting more from this collaboration of author and narrator.Brilliant.

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6 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    3 out of 5 stars

Second Book, OK 3 1/2 Stars

This book is good, but. It will hold your attention however, when you are dealing with an insane person like Diana, you alert people immediately, you don't have a lot of dialogue discussing something else. There was a little of this in the first book, but a lot in this one.

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