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Bewilderness, Part One: Threshold
- Narrated by: Shayna Small
- Length: 3 hrs and 28 mins
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Summary
The Gateway Project is going to save the world.
Maybe.
Dr. Abby Corman has a bold idea: open a stable doorway between our world and an uninhabited parallel Earth. A new world we can use to mine resources to end poverty, grow enough food to end all hunger, and allow for population growth to end overcrowding. What could be a more noble aspiration for a brilliant young scientist?
But the path to hell is paved with good intentions....
The Gateway is in a secure lab in a huge office building in New York. Ultra-modern, impenetrable by industrial spies or foreign agents, totally secure. Once it goes into lockdown for the Gateway test firing, it becomes the world’s largest and most unbreakable vault. Locked doors, though, can do more than keep bad things out. They can keep bad things in.
Bewilderness: Threshold is the first part of a sprawling science fiction epic packed with weird science, corporate greed, betrayal, and horror. An Audible Original by New York Times best seller Jonathan Maberry, author of Patient Zero and V-Wars.
What listeners say about Bewilderness, Part One: Threshold
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- The phantom reviewer
- 12-01-23
Bad impression of male voices!
This is a great listen and the narration is very good, except when the female narrator attempts to ‘do’ a male voice! It is bad to the point of being distracting from the story.
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- Graham Key
- 22-01-23
A toxic workplace!
Well narrated, this story is a novel twist on the parallel worlds concept, but my goodness it's a tough listen having worked in a toxic workplace with a narcissistic boss like the one in the story. It's relentless! Needs a lot more light and shade, instead the author beats you over the head as the tension piles up to an unbearable level. Got to bale out on this one.
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- E. Grandison-mills
- 07-11-21
great
I really enjoyed it kept me entertained. Short and exciting can't wait for part 2. I thought the narrator was good personally and did it justice, however a few reviews mentioned her sounding like nickelodeon characters and now I can't unhear it lol.
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- JOD
- 01-02-23
Excellent Sci-Fi
This is great modern sci-fi disaster and the author is very good at it, will get part 2 now.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Tim
- 23-09-21
Good fun
A bit of British Pagan folk music fun… I enjoyed it. Probably not worth a credit but for free it’s a winner
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2 people found this helpful
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- Lee
- 27-08-21
A run of the mill Sci-fi with poor narration.
I've listened to the entire trilogy now. If you like your run of the mill sci-fi stereotypes, cliches and story, then this is for you. Except, the narration is quite poor.
A not too particularly well written story, but bearable made worse by the narrator. I've listened to so many audiobooks lately that are completely ruined by poor narration. Ironic really, as the narration will make or break an audiobook, more so than the story!
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1 person found this helpful
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- Andreas Strøm
- 29-07-21
Brilliant!
A classic science-gone-wrong story that builds and builds towards certain catastrophe. The characters are fleshed out nicely and the science is explained very well. Exactly what I expect from the never disappointing Maberry. Ends on a real cliffhanger, so you have no choice but to get part two. My only complaint is that the narrator at times sounds like Bart Simpson...
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3 people found this helpful
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- Gavin Cooksley
- 28-10-21
Enthralling! Brown Stuff hits the spinney thing!
Wonderful pacing dragging you straight into world's of infinite possibilities.
Really good! Now part two!
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1 person found this helpful
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- Jon
- 05-10-21
B movie plot, painful narration
Most of it feels like filler, as it only seems to pick up in the last chapter or two. The worst of it is the narrator giving long, slow, drawn out narration. I ended up playing it at 1.5x which makes it close to bearable.
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- Ella
- 04-08-23
Could have been great
This could have been a great book. The story idea might not be new exactly, but it presents an interesting twist and the writer is talented. However, the level of stereotyping and the cartoonishness of the characters is extraordinary. This has the psychological sophistication of a 70s James Bond or Indiana Jones movie. The bad guys/girls are one-dimensional, narcissistic, blond, blue-eyed villains (think "James Bond villain meets bunch of Indiana Jones antagonists from World War II") and the good guys/girls are extraordinary, loving, selfless, culturally diverse heroes whose only problem is that they are quite literally too good to be true. And so it goes: the story never rings true, not even for a short while. Another problem always accompanying such a cast of simplistic characters: the end is way too predictable.
Such a shame, this could have been so good.
Performance: the narrator does her best to stick to the stereotypical concepts of the characters, even going a bit overboard at times. For example: just because a character has a Spanish or Indian name, is it strictly necessary to go down the Homer-Simpson's Apu road of overexaggerated dialects? I thought that kind of ethnical stereotyping was a thing of the past?
All in all, this still has/had the potential to entertain, though. The most disappointing thing is that it could have so easily been so much better. Therefore 2 stars instead of 1 for both story and performance. Not much harm done, however, one may argue, as these titles are part of the "plus catalogue" thus free of charge.
PS: books 1 to 3 are more like chapters of one book than a series of three individual books.
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