Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Unavailable
Accidentally In Love With...A God?
Unavailable
Accidentally In Love With...A God?
Unavailable
Accidentally In Love With...A God?
Audiobook11 hours

Accidentally In Love With...A God?

Written by Mimi Jean Pamfiloff

Narrated by Helen Wick

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

Trapped for decades, a powerful god seeks freedom . . . and revenge. But the only thing that can save him is the passion of a woman's touch . . .

Emma Keane is your average city girl trying to get a date. There's just one thing holding her back: the disembodied male voice speaking to her through her mind. Sound kind of crazy? Maybe. But crazy turns downright deadly when the voice persuades her to travel to the wilds of the Mayan jungle. There she will free his body-his incredibly hot, muscled, naked body.

Humans are so frail, so undisciplined, so susceptible to love. And when this ancient being connects with Emma, the feelings she sparks drive him utterly mad. Protective, keep-her-close, never-let-her-go kind of mad. Which might not be such a bad thing because from the moment the beautiful, passionate Emma unshackles his body, they are hunted at every turn. Now he'll have to do everything in his power to keep her safe. But will it be enough?

The Accidentally Yours Series BOOK 1: Accidentally in Love with...a God?
BOOK 2: Accidentally Married to...a Vampire?
BOOK 3: Sun God Seeks...Surrogate?
BOOK 3.5: Accidentally...Evil? (a Novella)
BOOK 4: Vampires Need Not...Apply?
BOOK 4.5: Accidentally...Cimil? (a Novella) (Coming in January 2014)
BOOK 5: Accidentally...Over? (Coming in August 2014)
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 29, 2013
ISBN9781478978794
Unavailable
Accidentally In Love With...A God?

More audiobooks from Mimi Jean Pamfiloff

Related to Accidentally In Love With...A God?

Related audiobooks

Contemporary Romance For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Accidentally In Love With...A God?

Rating: 3.7142860714285715 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

56 ratings9 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Twenty-two-year-old Emma Keane is just your average city girl trying to get a date. She's a petite and bubbly redhead who's always up for having a little fun. There's just one tiny snag holding her back from finding the perfect guy. And that would be...well...'Guy': the disembodied male voice speaking to her in her mind.Sound kind of crazy? Probably. But crazy turns downright deadly when the voice persuades Emma to travel deep into the Mayan jungle. There she will be able to free him from the prison where he has been trapped for the past seven decades.Humans are so vulnerable, so undisciplined, so susceptible to their emotions - particularly love. He must have spent too much time among human-kind before his imprisonment, because it certainly seems that many of their vulnerabilities have begun to alter his personality. That must be the only reason why from the first moment this ancient being connects with Emma, the feelings she sparks drive him utterly mad. Never before has he felt such a protective, keep-her-close, never-let-her-go kind of madness for one particular woman.Actually, that might not be such a bad idea, because from the moment the beautiful, passionate Emma unshackles his body, they are hunted at every turn. Now he'll have to do everything in his considerable power to keep her safe. But will that be enough? Honestly, if he wasn't already immortal, Emma Keane would quite literally be the death of him!This is the first book by Mimi Jean Pamfiloff that I've ever read. I usually enjoy reading paranormal romances - especially stories that draw from cultural myths. In my opinion, this was a thoroughly engaging story - filled with a number of likable characters - along with several characters who I felt quite comfortable hating from their introduction, as well. The plot was thrilling and action-packed, and held my attention until the very end.I give Accidentally in Love With...A God? an A+! and look forward to reading the next book in the series sometime very soon. I'm actually quite curious to see how this story will continue; and how each subsequent book will incorporate the world that Ms. Pamfiloff has created with this series.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Very, very funny. A sarcastic fantasy about the voice in Emma's head. Very light and enjoyable reading.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    holy tickle jar.... this is the best book I've ever read.... or listen too!!! its smart comebacks and fabulous reader brought this book to life. I loved every moment of it. this book was not a second boring. I hope the next book will be as funny and smart witted as this. Honestly I've never laughed from a book before. 5 stars baby, 5 stars
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Loved this book. Made me laugh so much. Great author and audio reader. Totally worth the listen. Now, onto some Vampires.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A great story. Although it was a bit long and was drawn out in places I still enjoyed it. I love Mimi's stories!
    I would have loved to hear the dual POV in male and female but the female narrator did a good job.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    When I saw the cover and read the blurb on NetGalley, I couldn’t resist requesting this book. I had never heard of this series before, but apparently it’s been out for a while. I received an uncorrected advance copy for the upcoming re-edited release in print.

    The story begins with Emma Keane going on a blind date. As soon as her blind date opens his mouth, we’re introduced to the snarky male voice inside Emma’s head. She tearfully acknowledges that she can never pursue a “normal” relationship as long as the voice is around to make her appear like a freak, so she lets her date go. On her way home, she’s hit by a cab and ends up in a coma for a month. That is the turning point of the story, and the voice who she calls Guy, tells her that he needs her help to free him. On the one hand she’s reluctant to believe him because in the twenty-two years that he’s been inside her head, he’s never divulged his name or who he is, where he’s from. Nothing. On the other hand, she sees it as her chance to be finally free. So she agrees. All she has to do is travel into the Mayan jungle, jump into a lake of sorts and recite a phrase he taught her. What could go wrong? The answer, just about everything.

    What followed felt like a massive info dump. There were enemies, The Maaskab. Allies, the Uchben. Mysterious jars and dark magic. A love triangle that was reminiscent of a certain teenage vampire trilogy, and a child shouldn’t have been able to exist. I really wanted to like this book, but there were just too many things that put me off the story.

    The Push and Pull – There was a lot of it between Emma and Guy. At first it was cute, then after the third time it got increasingly tedious and boring. She’d let him in, he’d say all the right things only to take everything back a few minutes later and then the anger and resentment would set in which led her to do some pretty foolish things. His defense was that it was for her own good that he kept trying to fight his attraction and wanted to push her away.

    The Love Triangle – I felt like she led Tomasso on only to try and stuff him in the friend zone whenever it was convenient for her. Whenever she got into a heated argument with Guy, she ran to Tomasso. Guy didn’t seem to trust him a hundred percent, but of course it was set up to look like jealousy rather than valid concern.

    Emma – “Holy Virgin of Guadalupe”, she nearly drove me to the brink of insanity. Not just by her actions, but her inner monologues did me in too.

    Chapter 24: She has an epiphany. She realizes that Guy really had been trying to protect her.

    “The threats were real. The priests were real. They had taken my grandmother and had come hunting for me. Guy really had been watching over me my entire life despite being trapped in a watery hell, unable to breathe or feel sunlight. And to his credit, he never once complained or whimpered about his effed-up situation. He’d simply focused on doing what he could to keep anything dangerous away from me. Even Jake, the serial killer. Yes. Yes, Guy’d driven me crazy during the process, but I got it now.”

    Chapter 27: She finds out he is Votan, God of Death and War. Well now she’s livid. Again.

    “All this time, I’d been living with a killer.”

    I guess her capacity to be thankful just ran out. Despite their connection of twenty-two years, she automatically assumed the worst of him.

    And what she did with their bond. Twice. Not smart.

    Info Dump – There were so many moving parts to this story, that my focus shifted so many times trying to catalog them all and weigh them against new information. The last info dump came when the villain spilled his evil plan. At that point I just took a leaf from Emma’s book and “Put it in your Can’t Deal with This Now Pocket.”

    The Big Showdown was anticlimactic which was a bit of a disappointment.

    The story was told from Emma’s POV in the first person Guy’s POV in the third person in alternating chapters. I didn’t mind that approach, but I found it difficult being in Emma’s head for so long. I liked how the story flowed, with her present running parallel to Guy’s past until they met face to face. The action portions were not altogether uninteresting, but the focus of the story was definitely more on the trust and honesty issues between Emma and Guy. I felt that a lot of the drama could have been solved with a bit of mature communication if Emma hadn’t been always on the defensive. Guy wasn’t completely innocent either, but with his sister’s visions, I thought he’d be a little more receptive to the possibility of being with her. There is no doubt that Ms Pamfiloff has an incredible imagination. I just couldn’t bring myself to care about the characters or their fate. I didn’t laugh when I probably should have, nor did I cry when it might have been appropriate. The ending wasn’t really a cliffhanger, but you’ll probably have a what the heck moment. You’ll have to pick up book two to find out what happens. If you’re still curious, I think you should give this a go, but as for me, I struggled with this book, and I will not be continuing on with the series.

    Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher via NetGalley for the purpose of an honest review, but I also purchased a copy from Amazon in 2012.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    234 pages on the Nook. This story will keep you reading. I totally enjoyed it and will be looking for more by this author.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I was hooked from the first page; Emma is a 22 year-old woman who is trying to live a normal life, if one can consider having a conversation with a voice in your head that no one else knows about normal. The voice in her head belongs to a god who's been trapped in a Mayan jungle cenote for the last 70 years. This story was a different aspect on the supernatural/paranormal genre in that we are introduced to a MC that's a god, not vampire or shapeshifter. Emma agrees to help free him from his prison after a disastrous date that ends up with Emma being comatose and almost becoming an organ donor.Once in Mexico, the action begins to really pick after Guy (the voice) has been released from his watery prison. I felt bad for Emma, all she wanted was to be free from the voice in her and find out what happened to her beloved grandmother, who went missing awhile back. It got to be annoying that Guy wouldn't give her any information when she asked for the truth, but honestly, if he gave her the story upfront, the book would have ended sooner than it did. And talk about a cliffhanger? I got so into the story that I actually bought the next couple of books in the series. Can't wait to read the rest!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book was very cute. The heroine was the perfect amount of sarcastic and the male lead was just as ridiculous. The story itself was over the top, light-hearted, slightly erotic, and highly amusing.I have given the book 3.5 stars. It’s a great book to read when you’re looking for something fun, light, and requiring very little effort to enjoy. If you’ve read any of the Charlie Davidson series, it holds a similar vibe.