
A Glow of Candles and Other Stories
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3 months free
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Narrated by:
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Samuel E. Hoke
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By:
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Charles L. Grant
So, you think you like to be scared....
Nominated for the World Fantasy Award, the Hugo Award, and the coveted Nebula, the unforgettable tales in this magnificent collection are the work of one of today's most respected masters of horror. Here are stories designed to carry the listener across fear's threshold, to terror...and beyond.
©1981 Kathryn Ptacek (P)2021 David N. WilsonListeners also enjoyed...




















Listener received this title free
A Glow of Candles
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Reminds me of Stephen King short stories
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Listener received this title free
*this book was given to me for free at my request and I provided this voluntary review*
Not a typical horror novel
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A Glow of candles
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Listener received this title free
Charles Grant did a great job with A GLOW OF CANDLES. Each story has twists and turns and keeps the listener on their toes as to what will happen next. From the strange to the downright scary, A GLOW OF CANDLES is well worth the listening time!
I recieved this audiobook free in exchange for an honest review.
GREAT
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Listener received this title free
I liked the narrator’s voice but I’m not sure it’s right for narrating. It’s just too low, especially when I personally think a requirement for narrating (if you want to make a living doing this and be known as a great narrator) is to be able to do a variety of voices. In this case, he can do low and really low. So there were characters (adult females and kids) in which I had to keep reminding myself that it wasn’t a man speaking. There were times when the last word of a sentence was cut off/cut in half. I’m guessing he prefers to read a line or two, then pause it, just in case there’s a mess-up and he isn’t left having to re-narrate a long passage. Some of the pauses between chapters were too long, in my opinion, or oftentimes way too short to where I didn’t even realize the next story/next chapter had started.
Questions/Comments:
A Crowd of Shadows 2/5
I didn't understand why the MC wanted to kill the kid when he found out the parents had been the robots or whatever and not him. And I swear whenever "the kid" was mentioned, it was vague. So when it was revealed, "the kid" was actually eighteen years old, yeah... my whole image of him changed because he was actually an adult.
Hear Me Now, My Sweet Abby Rose 2/5
I didn’t understand what was going on in this story besides when the drunk guys show up and are looking for Grace, and Nell tells them basically to go away. Then Grace ends up killed. What was the beginning of the story about? What did the magical aspect have to do with this story?
Temperature Days on Hawthorne Street
?
Come Dance with Me On My Pony’s Grave
5/5
The Three of Tens 3/5
This was an interesting story. I didn’t get the little riddle thing at the end though.
The Dark of Legends 1/5
The story was boring. For a majority of publishers to go out of business at the same time, I guess
I wasn’t really understanding how the world worked. I wasn’t a fan of the one-sided interview at the end either.
Caesar, Now Be Still 1/5
This story was boring.
White Wolf Calling 1/5
I thought this was a bland werewolf story. It might as well have just been a regular wolf/no transformation story. It didn’t have that magical quality werewolves have.
The Rest is Silence 3/5
This was an interesting story but I felt a little lost with the ending.
When All the Children Call My Name 1/5
This story annoyed me because kids are dying at the playground but there was never any talk of the police doing anything about it. Or when the MC found out parents thought he was the one killing them, even though one died before he even got back, and he had no motive to do it. It didn’t make sense. It was obvious when the little kids were first introduced that they were the killers of the older boys, yet how did the MC figure that out? It was like he went from talking to the one teenage boy who told him the little kids were the culprit and the MC kept telling him to go away because he was making stuff up, then suddenly the MC was acting as though he’d known it was the little kids the whole time.
Secrets of the Heart 1/5
“My parents told me never to let anyone in the house,” but they never told her to open the door in the first place? The adults didn’t find that strange? I found it interesting that the author said something about how he had the idea for this story but it took him a long while to get the story together. I was expecting something that hadn’t already been written. I automatically thought of the one Alfred Hitchcock episode with the little boy who could make anything happen and his parents and neighbors were terrified of him. There was nothing original here.
A Glow of Candles, a Unicorn’s Eye 1/5
Again, I found this one boring.
Meh.
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