Your ears are a direct pathway to your brain, so why not listen to an audiobook to fill your brain with a couple of cool horror stories? It’s summer, which means many of us are going on vacations or road trips. Maybe you drive a lot for work. Maybe you want to soak up the sun but don’t feel like holding a book. Whatever the reason, audiobooks are a valid and viable way to consume literature. Yes, I just referred to Disco Rice as literature.
Both of my most recent books have been produced as audiobooks, and both by the wonderful narration of John Wayne Comunale. He narrated Baby Fights and has been working with authors such as Bridgett Nelson, Patrick C. Harrison, and many more, including narrations of his own books. He’s absolutely one of the best narrators out there, so you know you’re in for a treat when his name is attached to a project.
People don’t understand why I do what I do. I’ve always been misunderstood. I have accepted this but maybe I’ve gone too far.
I just can’t help myself. I like the soft texture, the squishing of them in my mouth. The way they pop between my teeth. And I can’t get enough.
It all started when I worked at the landfill. But that was taken away from me. So I brought my habit home. My family doesn’t understand but I think they’re coming around to seeing things my way. If only people tried it they too would grow to appreciate the feeling of squirming in their mouths. The complex flavor profile. The thrill of engaging in something so exclusive, so . . . taboo.
It’s an experience. A way of life.
Nothing hits quite like Disco Rice!
It’s been said there’s no such thing as bad publicity, so when a man is murdered at the premiere of their debut film, Death Obsession, a small group of young filmmakers decide to make the best of a bad situation.
The Traveling Movie Show is a cross-country tour of the last drive-in theaters in America. A way to build buzz for a new horror film. But murder is close on their tails and fear of the tour being shut down has caused this misfit group to take fate into their own hands.
As they cover up each new death in each new town, they begin to turn on one another, wondering who the killer is. In the blistering heat of summer as they travel across the Midwest, they find out that some secrets weren’t meant to be kept. And sometimes killers are born of celluloid, dreams, and blood money.
Well now I know which audibles I’m getting this month!