I couldn’t get enough of the mans life. a trie American hero, so courageous it’s inspiring to say the least. Thank you Chuck Yeager
absolutely outstanding
Review from Yeager →
I couldn’t get enough of the mans life. a trie American hero, so courageous it’s inspiring to say the least. Thank you Chuck Yeager
Review from The Wild Life of Our Bodies →
the book’s vision of urban biomes is quite hopeful. cliff-dwelling plants, gut-dwelling worms, the vital function of the far-from-useless appendix — all of this is vastly illuminating. though I’m not willing to get infested with hookworms quite yet..
Too many words for a small story. Not Much About About the Indians and more about the authors travails.
I love this I would leave better reviews but I’m not paid for this so I’m keeping it pretty basic but the book is legit
Read the story for yourself to find out but it was nothing but a huge disappointment for me. Every enemy is really a misunderstood ally. Every plan is within other plans within other plans to an absurd degree. The elites of the game “all” struggle to defeat one rando who doesn’t appear until book 5…
Who chose this person to narrate this possibly great listen. I’ll never know because his narration took all of my interest in finishing it away. I marked it as finished and gave up by Chapter 5
The narrator can at time voice fades into a familiar tone and you can zone out once or twice but the story sooo good you can’t help but to rewind back to hear what you missed.
great character development and focus. also a great end to the trilogy and and setup for the next books
I have yet to be disappointed by Lewis or his creator(s). Timeless truths about politics and the too-human beings floundering in the tide of ambition. Lewis is a remarkable auditor. Bravo!
The narrator puts on this SUPER thick, exaggerated Southern drawl…. and it’s too much. It’s way too much.
