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Wetbones

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Wetbones

By: John Shirley
Narrated by: Edison McDaniels
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About this listen

A flesh-and-soul-devouring addiction runs rampant through the dark playground of the Hollywood elite in this tale of horror from a Bram Stoker Award winner.

Welcome to Los Angeles, where every addiction is encouraged....

Struggling Hollywood screenwriter Tom Prentice can hardly believe that the emaciated and mutilated corpse lying on the morgue slab was once his ex-wife. Then his roommate’s missing brother turns up in a local hospital having sliced open his own chest and legs for some sick, inexplicable reason. In Oakland, the Reverend Garner, a recovering addict, leaves his ministry in search of his teenage daughter, who was last seen in the company of her ghoulish kidnapper. And the Los Angeles police are meanwhile baffled in their hunt for the elusive “Wetbones” serial killer who leaves nothing of his victims behind except a damp, grisly pile of bones.

Though Tom, the reverend, and the LAPD are on separate quests for answers, they are all being led into the darkest shadows of Hollywood, where the debauchery never ceases and pleasure is a drug that devours human flesh, blood, and sanity. But the true source of the all-consuming addiction is the most horrifying revelation of all, for it is not of this rational Earth.

From International Horror Guild Award-winning author John Shirley comes a true masterwork of modern terror. It’s decidedly not for the faint of heart.

©1991 John Shirley (P)2019 Mark Alan Miller
Occult Supernatural Scary Paranormal Heartfelt
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Listener received this title free

Irritating

I am sad to say that I could not finish this, not because of the horror, which I never got around to, a minor death and that was about it, but the constant repetition of 'ha ha' drove me insane, I just could not listen to it anymore and the 'daddy dude' from Constance was equally infuriating.

The sample provided did not include the constant repetition of 'ha ha' that occurs with such regularity you become sure the author is trying to brainwash you. (It does occur twice though)

Edison McDaniels does a great job with the narration, as far as I listened, I would certainly listen to other books narrated by him but never anything by John Shirley, ever again.

I will add that I rarely stop listening to a book after an hour, I usually plough through to the end, but this one is just too annoying.

I received a free review copy in exchange for my honest, unbiased and freely given review, which you have here.

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