Midnight Picnic (Unabridged) Midnight Picnic (Unabridged)

Midnight Picnic (Unabridged‪)‬

    • 5.0 • 1 Rating
    • $12.99

    • $12.99

Publisher Description

GRAPHIC CONTENT WARNING: This audiobook contains material some listeners may find disturbing.

From Nick Antosca, creator of the Syfy Channel's Channel Zero

In the morning, Bram finds the bones of a murdered child. At noon, the murdered child begs for his help. And by nightfall, they have killed a man together and set off into the afterlife, where nothing is what it was, and death is only the beginning of punishment. An eerie story about the nature of death and the self, Midnight Picnic inhabits an American landscape made strange and unfamiliar. 

GENRE
Fiction
NARRATOR
RB
R.C. Bray
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
04:32
hr min
RELEASED
2016
January 26
PUBLISHER
Blue Heron Audio
PRESENTED BY
Audible.com
SIZE
169.4
MB

Customer Reviews

AudioBookReviewer.com ,

it was performed by R. C. Bray. Need I say more?

When Midnight Picnic started with Bram accidentally running over a dog and trying but ultimately failing to aid the dying animal, I was convinced I would hate this. However, the engaging writing, the flow of the language coupled with the haunting atmosphere really pulled me into this dark and sad story.

Bram is basically a decent bloke living a mundane life with an on/off sexual relationship with the depressed girl living on the same floor as him above Moms bar. His accident is the start of a journey that leads Bram to the land of the dead where he follows six-year-old Adam who is consumed with the concepts of right, wrong and punish. Adam was murdered by Jacob Bunny and is seeking help from Bram to settle the score with Jacob. Author Nick Antosca provides heartbreaking vignettes of the tragic lives of these well-drawn characters and portrays a dim and eerie afterlife.

Not so much a scary ghost story, but a highly emotional and unsettling, surreal road trip, Midnight Picnic was utterly spellbinding exploring issues such as loneliness, evil, and redemption. Only four and a half hours long, I listened to this in one sitting. I’m still not sure what to make of the ending, though.

With regards to the narration, it was performed by R. C. Bray. Need I say more? As always, outstanding. His tone matched the tension and eeriness of the story perfectly. Quite often, if a young child is a major part of the story, I find the narration suffers. In this case, I was in awe how authentic six-year-old Adam sounded. There were no issues with the production.

If you enjoy unique surreal stories this is for you.

Audiobook was provided for review by the publisher.

Please find this complete review and many others at my review blog

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