
The Last Indigo and the Beast of Epicerra
Not your average 7th grader (a sci-fi fantasy forgotten past adventure)
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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D. Lynn Robinson

This title uses virtual voice narration
About this listen
Indigo's only memories are of the past seven days. But that's the least of his worries. First, he needs to find Math class. He needs to stay out of trouble. And why in the world are his eyes changing color?
Indigo tries his best to get through the first day of 7th grade without standing out. He attends his classes and manages to make a few friends. But back at home, he worries his mother hasn't been telling him the whole story. When strange occurences on a field trip have him questioning who he really is, Indigo begins digging a little deeper. Frightening flashbacks, a strange unstable power, and voices in his head are only the beginning.
Praise for the Last Indigo series:
From the kids:
"Dude, that cover is fire!" --7th grade boy
"That literally sounds so amazing, omg!" --6th grade girl
"I want to read it so bad!" --6th grade boy
"I seriously stayed up until 11 o'clock at night reading your book." --8th grade boy
From the parents:
"It's so nice to know there's nothing questionable in your books. Thank you!" -- Mom #1
"Your book interrupted my life!" --Mom #2 (we still don't know if she gave it to her kids or not...😂 )
"My kids are absolutely hooked on The Last Indigo!" --Dad #1
From the author:
I wanted Indigo to be young, and then I wanted him to believe he was the bad guy. I wanted him to have a past he never thought he'd recover from. A million reasons why he could never be the hero. And then, piece by piece, I wanted to show him that he could choose to become something other than what he was. I wanted him to have people around him who would believe in him, and help him to believe in himself. Ultimately, I wanted to find a way to convince him that, mistakes or not, he was the hero of this story. Because he chose to be. ❤️
Kids don't have it easy anymore. Every day they fight battles. They face challenges that, thirty years ago, none of us would've believed. But they're ready for this. These kids are stronger than we were. They are the superheroes of their time, and if we teach them the value of choosing to be the hero of the story, there's nothing they can't do.
D. Lynn Robinson
What listeners say about The Last Indigo and the Beast of Epicerra
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- Kristen
- 01-29-25
I loved the setting and track of the story
The story was amazing but the narrative voice kinda sucked. It kept glitching out and had no emotional sense so it was hard to understand what it was saying.
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