In the Hour of Crows Audiobook By Dana Elmendorf cover art

In the Hour of Crows

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In the Hour of Crows

By: Dana Elmendorf
Narrated by: Brittany Pressley, Adam Gold
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About this listen

"In the Hour of Crows enthralls like a delicious dark spell.”
—Glendy Vanderah, bestselling author of Where the Forest Meets the Stars

In a small town in Appalachia, people paint their doorways blue to keep spirits away. Black ferns grow where death will follow. And Weatherly Opal Wilder is a Death Talker.

When called upon, she can talk the death out of the dying and save their lives—only once, never twice. But this truly unique gift comes at a price, rooting Weatherly to people who only want her around when they need her and resent her unfamiliar ways when they don’t.

Weatherly’s cousin Adaire also has a gift: she’s a Scryer and can see the future reflected back in dark surfaces. Right before she is killed in an accident, Adaire saw something unnerving, and that’s why Weatherly believes she was murdered—never thinking for a moment that it was an accident. But when Weatherly, for the first time, is unable to talk the death out of the mayor’s son, the whole town suspects she is out for revenge, that she wouldn’t save him.

With the help of clues Adaire left behind and her family’s Granny Witch recipe box, Weatherly sets out to find the truth behind her cousin’s death, whatever it takes.

Imbued with magic, witchery, and suspense, Dana Elmendorf’s In the Hour of Crows is a thrilling tale of friendship, identity, and love.

©2024 Dana Elmendorf (P)2024 Harlequin Enterprises, Limited
Fairy Tales Historical Magical Realism Southern Exciting
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Listen: What Dana Elmendorf wants you to know about In the Hour of Crows

'Why did I set this story in small town Appalachia?…'
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love!!!

unique plot, which is hard to come buy in the world of witchery. great opening for further books and I sure hope there are more.

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That was… something ✌️

Update - In chapter 12 — I’m at the point where the FC is doing tea time with 5th graders and she said “5th graders might be too old for tea time but they are only a year or two younger than me so I guess it’s ok”.

I’m sorry what? Did the author forget the age of her own protagonist? lol 24 is more than a year or two older than 13-14. So maybe the FC is supposed to be like 18?

Original review:

I had to give up. 🙄

The book was way too angsty for me. Lots of emotions, not a lot of depth. There is also way too much inner monologue on an FC who was simply boring to read about. This book should definitely be labeled as young adult, more towards young. I definitely think the author made the FC 24 simply to get a wider range of readers because this book is so simple with a lot of plot holes. Even the “jokes” were just simple. Something I would’ve loved when I was 14/15. 🥱

The FC doesn’t even have a job and the whole plot is trying to find what happened to her. Even though we already know so I was constantly confused why they are investing a death of someone they already know how she died. She lives with a grandma she hates in a small town where apparently half the population dies. 🤡

If you’re looking for an interesting romantic story full of intrigue and wonder, this is not the book to read. Lol again, it’s very very light and simple. I was just bored throughout waiting for it to pick up but it’s constantly the inner monologue of the FC going about her day to day. Not my cup of tea. ☕️

Hope the book gets labelled correctly. Again it’s Young Adult, rated G, there’s barely any cussing. ✌️

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