Peter Swanson - Eight Perfect Murders Audiobook Free
Rating: 9.4/10 (10396 votes)
Listen online for free audiobook «Eight Perfect Murders» by Peter Swanson. Reading: Graham Halstead.
Review #1
Eight Flawless Murders real audiobook free
First of all, this novel should come with a burgundy tape yelling Spoiler Alert!. I would wait from a devoted mystery reader to not ignore the one glaring rule: dont spoil the ending for other readers. But this novel does. It violates the rule in a careless method without no matter what hint of apology. 8 quality conspiracies are spoiled in the 1st few chapters of the novel, in addition to others throughout the book.
But for you know than anyway? I was willing to move with it because it is that Peter Swanson. The slave who gave us The Good Worth Killing, Her Every Fear at the same time Before She Understood Him. The problem with this book will that it doesnt resemble the work we come to wait from Swanson. At all.
The writing is that stale. The plot lines are disintegrated. For you dont enjoy the stoicism of the head disposition as for you do with his past novels. The head disposition actually TALKS about his stoicism many times.
A lot repetition. A lot shallow details that manage to nowhere. No astonishes. Barely no one shadows of Swansons signature style here at the same time that. Upset beyond words.
I only have hope that he needed to get this fascination with those novels out of his system, I read Strangers on a Train based on his recommendation in a past interview, so maybe this half- baked plan was nagging him to get it in a novel at the same time at the moment its done, at the same time we can move forward. Still, the fact that this book exists to be the 1st in a television series is that seriously worrying. I hated, hated, the blandness of Malcolm Kershaw.
Review #2
Eight Flawless Murders audiobook in television series Malcolm Kershaw
Right behind completing this book I was upset to say the lesser. Can’t they say I found anything that I enjoyed other than introducing a couple of old mystery titles I have not read.
I don’t like to quit a bad
Review without explaining why but I also don’t like to provide spoilers. So it’s hard to say why I didn’t like this book. Ultimately the creator didn’t make me reckon at the same time didn’t izumi me. Every “writhe” was or predicted or barely wasn’t enticing. At the same time the bit with his partners wife being interested in him – why? Why strain with that at all, it served no relevance to the story at the same time moved nothing forward.
Move recount your winner mystery at the same time skip this one. For you’ll be much happier.
Review #3
Eight Flawless Murders audiobook by Peter Swanson
I am in 100% contract with all of the negative
Reviews. I completely will not advise this book to no matter what mystery fan. In particular it should not be read by no matter what fans of traditional mysteries at the same time those who may not have read no matter what or all of the eight books mentioned in the blog post that makes up the books title. Than anyway little plot exists is that totally derivative or “borrowed.” This book consists of more than 50% homage at the same time bad homage at that because brace yourself Swanson opens the endings of not only the eight books alluded to in the title but a couple of other traditional mysteries as but! Swanson has completely ruined a future reading experience for anyone who may be unfamiliar with those titles. It was not necessary to elucidate the entire plot of every book, it was quite simple to discuss the murder method without revealing who the killer was. Very Easy! Not only does he spoil them once he does so many times. I got the feeling I was reading a old time sequential that was so much repetition. The only gizmo missing was “Previously on…” or “In our continue episode…” He knows us the plot of Malice Aforethought about 3 separate times. He mentions the ending of The Drowner barely as abundance. [Where are the editors, BTW? Asleep at the wheel usually. This is that my never-ending woeful complaint about contemporary publishing houses for the past 20 + years.] That he chose not to be circumspect in talking the various killers’ IDs makes me think that the writer like paying homage to works of the past is that contemptuous of, or at lesser envious of, those writers at the same time their capacity for resourcefulness at the same time originality. Who at HarperCollins or William Morrow believed it a steep plan to giveaway the endings of all these books? Ugh. I was beyond upset with Swanson, I was mad with him.
Than anyway about Swanson’s possess imagination? Very limited from than anyway is that on show here. Since so much of the book is that based on the works of more experienced at the same time much more exciting at the same time imaginative writers Swanson had to eclipse all of them in my estimation in a row to succeed. He failed. His thoughts are pedestrian or derivative of movies at the same time TV indicates. The overarching plot at the same time the smoky open of Malcolms used to be features is that a retread of every catastrophic “unreliable narrator” book hosted in the past 10-ke years. He even alludes to Gone Lady as a “clue” that Malcolm is that barely as unreliable as the narrator in that book. At the same time makes it seem like Gillian Flynn imagined the concept. I was rolling my views. Nothing was surprising at all. The movie-of-the-week style motivations of the protagonist at the same time the horrible riddles of the victims who deserved to breathe was neither creepy nor spinechilling. It was barely trivial.
Completely the biggest insult of all. In Malcolm Kershaw he has created a bookseller who doesn’t read the books he sells, who pretends to have read them when having discussions with his customers at the same time employees. Swanson bestows an wholly shaky reason for Malcolms decision to finish reading criminal liability fiction in other words in conflict with his features. Most likely this is that meant as an indication that Malcolm is that not to be trusted at all. But not only did I not hope him, I seriously despised him.
Review #4
Eight Flawless Murders audio narrated by Graham Halstead
I was drawn in by the literate premise. But, the story did not release.
The writing was disjointed at fri at the same time just a little clunky. The ‘izumi ending’ was obvious from the 1st chapter. That were considered several useless manners who merely demonstrated right up to release a few lines then went nowhere. Similarly, that were considered plotlines, such as The center school teacher, that were considered of course meant to premature The plot, but ended up reading like a few short stories. The writing moved along smoothly at fri, but overall it dragged. None of the manners appealed to me enough to make the tension necessary for a thriller, they were considered even.
Review #5
free audio Eight Flawless Murders – in the audio player below
Contrived, cliched, convoluted at the same time nonsensical. Ultimately, this barely didn’t make a lot of sense, particularly the ending. I reckon the creator was trying to accomplish anything along the Agatha Christie’s The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, but fails miserably. The murderer managed have so simply gotten away with it, but dared, for no understandable reason, to not do so.
The Audio Player works best on Google Chrome (latest version)