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The Prison of Angels

The Half-Orcs, Book 6

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The Prison of Angels

By: David Dalglish
Narrated by: Matt DeRocco
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About this listen

This world is not safe. Your angels have done great things, but I fear their illusion of safety has been more damaging than they can possibly understand. The ancient evils may be gone, but new ones have replaced them.

Five years have passed since the death of the war god, and now, angels watch over the land. It should be a time of peace and prosperity. It is not.

With King Antonil marching east to retake his former lands from the orcs, Harruq Tun is thrust into a position of power he is completely unprepared for, leaving many plotting to usurp the throne for their own ends. Hovering over it all are the angels, enforcers of the law and wielders of the executioner's blades. Once viewed as humanity's saviors, the angels now find themselves struggling for a proper place in the new world.

Monsters in the Vile Wedge are stirring, and in the south, the nation of Ker moves to protect itself from a rule from on high. War comes, and if Harruq cannot stop it, their paradise of angels may soon become a blood-stained prison.

Fear the grace enforced by the sword.

About the author:

David Dalglish currently lives in rural Missouri with his wife Samantha and daughters Morgan and Katherine. He graduated from Missouri Southern State University in 2006 with a degree in Mathematics and spends way too much time watching Spongebob Squarepants with his daughter.

©2015 David Dalglish (P)2019 David Dalglish
Epic Epic Fantasy Fiction Fantasy Missouri War
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Worst narration ever?

The author should be having this narrator charged with the murder of his book.
Firstly, it sounds like it was recorded on a mobile phone in a bathroom. Volume is all over the place, there's background noise and the narrator regularly coughs and clears his throat throughout the reading.
The narrator has very obviously not had a read through of the book beforehand. Given how many books set in this world there are previous to this one (17 I think), it's painful to listen to the mutilated mispronounciatons of the names of places and characters.
The narrator regularly pronounces names differently from one sentence to the next. There are so many uncomfortable pauses as he struggles to read even simple words that I couldn't count them.
All very unfortunate as it is a good story.

My advice would be to read the book yourself or pray to Ashur that a competent narrator records this professionaly.

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