I honestly didn’t know what to expect when I first started listening to this story… But I’ve got to say I loved it! The story was both unique and fun! The writing was good and the narration fantastic!
Loved it
Review from Crooked Baby Blue →
I honestly didn’t know what to expect when I first started listening to this story… But I’ve got to say I loved it! The story was both unique and fun! The writing was good and the narration fantastic!
This is the 1st book I’ve listened to by this author. The book is well written and the narrator does a fantastic job.
I really enjoyed listening to this book. The narrator does a great job with the characters. Cherry is so much fun! She cracks me up!
This is the first book I’ve listened to by this author. Although it’s book #3, it works fine as a standalone. I enjoyed listening to this cozy mystery. The main character is a lot of fun, and the narrator does a great job.
This was a very good book! What a concept! It is a scarey premise.Narration by Joan Dukore was terrific. I was given this book free for an honest review.I loved it!
Secrets from a Serial Killer was a good listen overall. The narration was solid, and the character development worked well enough to keep me interested. That said, it didn’t quite deliver the level of tension I usually want in a thriller—it felt like it needed that extra spark to keep me on edge. For me,..
Received as an audio copy from the author David Lambert ( April 2025 ); this is an honest review. Breathtaking narrator by Joanna Dukore, Fragments of Tomorrow perfectly blends futuristic science fiction, crime fiction and one man’s rage against elitist tech companies that gives its listeners a complex thrill ride with reality being nothing more..
Jessica James is back with a punchier comedic personality in a more traditional detective thriller. This installment builds nicely on one of the more morally ambiguous characters in the first book (so far I recommend reading them in order). The plot builds well on the first and positions in a way that makes the next..
A timely mystery of confused identity and the nature of inquiry itself with some neat twists.and character beats. There is a clever gentrification subplot that takes things to a bit of a cartoonish extreme and while it’s not expressly political it seems keyed in to times today. Much of the plot and characters are abstracted..
Couldn’t finish the series after the narrator change with the 3rd book. I’ll try reading it instead.
