Brett Shearer
- 2
- opiniones
- 0
- votos útiles
- 35
- calificaciones
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Oracle
- Oracle, Book 1
- De: Andrew Pyper
- Narrado por: Joshua Jackson
- Duración: 9 h y 20 m
- Grabación Original
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
Oracle is a psychological thriller audiobook following Nate Russo, an FBI psychic who helps solve abductions and homicides by touching those close to the missing persons. His unique gift comes with a terrible price: He sees the horrific moments before the victims disappeared.
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Surprisingly good.
- De Carrie Byrnes en 08-21-21
- Oracle
- Oracle, Book 1
- De: Andrew Pyper
- Narrado por: Joshua Jackson
Entertaining, but...
Revisado: 09-26-21
I enjoyed this overall, though several plot elements were left hanging and unanswered; story could have benefited from a brief epilogue. Additionally, it's irksome when I, as a reader, put clues together way before the "professionals" do, or worse, when they miss the obvious altogether. It's hard to root for the incompetent. Joshua Jackson did a first-rate job narrating! Worth a listen.
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Invasive Aliens
- The Plants and Animals From Over There That Are Over Here
- De: Dan Eatherley
- Narrado por: Roger Davis
- Duración: 10 h y 56 m
- Versión completa
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
As Brits we pride ourselves as stoic defenders, boasting a record of resistance dating back to 1066. Yet, even a cursory examination of the natural world reveals that while interlopers of the human variety may have been kept at bay, our islands have been invaded, conquered and settled by an endless succession of animals, plants, fungi and other alien lifeforms that apparently belong elsewhere. Indeed it’s often hard to work out what actually is native, and what is foreign.
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Interesting, but woefully repetitive
- De Brett Shearer en 09-24-21
- Invasive Aliens
- The Plants and Animals From Over There That Are Over Here
- De: Dan Eatherley
- Narrado por: Roger Davis
Interesting, but woefully repetitive
Revisado: 09-24-21
Tedious by the second third as we are continually reminded about the same species, their mode of transference, their impacts, etc. chapter, after chapter, after chapter. Best when author is in the field, recounting searches for species with local specialists. Really starts to drag about the 58th time a Himalayan Balsam, Asian hornet, grey squirrel, Japanese knotweed, Etc. is referenced or used as an example. We get it. We've been reading the book- at increasingly faster speeds to get through it. Doubt I'd ever re-listen.
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