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House Infernal

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About this listen

The diabolical adventure never ended - it’s only just begun.

Part three of Edward Lee’s notorious, internationally published City Infernal Saga is here. Lee dares you to take another tour through the nightmarish City of the Abyss, and to walk with him though a house of horror, a house of graves...a house infernal.

A city, built with blood and bones...

Three things are about to join a crypt in Hell with a house on Earth...Nuns molested and drained of blood. A virginal student seduced by the perverse and taunted by things worse than ghosts. And six Angels, imprisoned in Hell and made pregnant by God knows what...

A house, built for the church, but designed by Satan...

When Venetia Barlow begins work at St. John’s Prior House, she expects a quiet summer of drudgery and boredom. But soon she’s haunted by lurid desires and visions of a city full of monsters...and the monsters know her name. Is the house really a place of meditation and worship, or is it a temple of abomination and the most evil secrets? Venetia will only find out, when the voice of a long-dead priest comes into her head and gives her a an unspeakable message from the howling, blood-drenched streets of Hell...

Welcome back...to the city infernal

©2007 David G. Barnett (P)2020 David G. Barnett
Fantasy Horror Scary Fiction Haunted Paranormal
All stars
Most relevant
The acting was great; the plot originally and complex. But - albeit intention from one character - the unrelenting use of the F work and other expletives overshadowed the fact that the author clearly has a great vocabulary and command of language. Unnecessarily, distracting and tiresome.

Too much foul language

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Listener received this title free

The third installment in this series is as bizarre as its predecessors. It could easily be read without prior knowledge of the first two books but it is a continuation of history of Mephistopolis and frankly those are as morbidly compelling as this one. There's gore galore and body horror in spades. The prose oozes ichor and the dialogue between certain characters is hilarious. I look forward to book 4.

Bradley's narration is on par with the first two entries but does benefit from being listened to at 1.5 speed just to match the temporary of the writing

Gloriously grotesque

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