Wilderness
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Narrated by:
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Theo Holland
About this listen
When a 17-year-old track star turns up mangled and dead on the switchback road by the Crescent Hotel, his poker crew grows suspicious of one another. Ebur, a retired cowboy, finds himself in the middle of a once-trustworthy group who all knew and loved Brady.
Or did they?
And can he trust them if they think he killed the boy?
Covering the broad swatch of lifestyles and struggles in off-peak Eureka Springs, Wilderness asks hard questions about retired men and those who try to tame them.
Praise for Lancelot Schaubert
“Schaubert’s words have an immediacy, a potency, an intimacy that grab the reader by the collar and say, ‘Listen, this is important!’ Probing the bones and gristle of humanity, his subjects challenge, but also offer insights into redemption if only we will stop and pay attention.” (Erika Robuck, national best-selling author of Hemingway’s Girl)
“Loved this story because Lance wrote about people who don't get written about enough and he did it with humor, compassion, and heart.” (Brian Slatterly, author of Lost Everything and editor of the New Haven Review)
“I’m such a fan of Lance Schaubert's work. His unique view of things and his life wisdom enriches all he does. We're lucky to count him among our contributors.” (Therese Walsh, author of The Moon Sisters and editorial director of Writer Unboxed)
"Lancelot Schaubert exhibits his talents in many forms from poetic verse to lyrical prose to musical compositions, all the while infusing them with charisma, passion, and wit. A true creative, Schaubert is one to watch in the literary world." (Heather Webb, author of Rodin's Lover and Becoming Josephine)
©2017 Lancelot Schaubert (P)2018 Lancelot SchaubertA small group of friends meet to play poker - young and old, male and female, working and retired, including a serving cop and a retired detective. Our retired detective finds one of the group dead the next day, and another the day after, and another, etc etc. All suspicious, none by natural causes.
I did wonder for a while what was going on and whether our lead character, Ebur was being targeted for something, as all the bodies were discovered by him. When we find out exactly what's what at the end, it kind of seems a stretch and a coincidence too far that he's the first on the scene every time, particularly when most of the time he doesn't even known that there is a scene waiting for him, until he gets there.
We get the whys and the wherefores and the reason for the deaths, which in truth were an unintended consequence of an ill-conceived idea. Ebur gets his answers to the mystery, but probably not any life answers in terms of his relationship with his wife and the direction they are heading. Ditto the effect and future with his young son. He knows what he wants and he knows what he doesn't and there seems little common ground between him and his estranged wife. The book's events seem to be trying to force him down another avenue that he doesn't want to travel, manipulated by a third party.
Overall enjoyable enough without being anything startlingly amazing or original.
Narrated by Theo Holland, who is one of my favourite story tellers when listening to an audible book. That was a nice billy bonus!
3 from 5
Read - (listened to) December, 2020
Published - 2017
Page count - 70 (1 hr 14 mins)
Source - Audible purchase
Format - Audible
Ok, enjoyable without being amazing
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