
Mother Howl
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Narrated by:
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Greg Lockett
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By:
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Craig Clevenger
A compelling literary crime that follows the son of a serial murderer who changes his identity in a bid to escape his past.
Sixteen-year-old Lyle Edison recognizes the face of a murder victim on the nightly news–the waitress at his local diner. A place he often frequented with his dad. The following day, his father is arrested and charged with her murder. And then, eight further bodies are discovered.
Following the revelation that his dad is a serial killer, Lyle is outcast and shunned. Forced to abandon his family, illegally obtaining a new identity, he moves away to start all over again.
Some years later, Lyle thinks he has finally moved on. But after several brushes with the law, Lyle’s past eventually catches up to him when a mysterious stranger known only as Icarus shows up and seems to know Lyle’s secret....
©2023 Craig Clevenger (P)2023 Datura BooksListeners also enjoyed...




















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what, I missed something.
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Not for me
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just ended, no purpose
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Interesting but…
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I didn’t want it to end…
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Great performance, weird story
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For the other worldly part of this book. Disappointed in the ending. Needed to take the ending further.
Mother Howl
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Icarus is another POV who thinks he’s beyond Earth so tried to kill himself so winds up in a psych ward, much like the soul-transporters in Craig’s piece Sunder from Filth. He’s blunt in the charming way of a southern black man (but maybe that’s the Audible narrator’s spin). He speaks of Mother Howl, what he personifies the universe as. “Silly String Theory,” medicine as “brain candy,” “I know you think I’m a foilhead who thinks Elvis shot Kennedy or something… PTA been after me for years” make me smile.
Lyle has so many coincidental run-ins with the law, I wouldn’t believe him as a cop either. He makes stupid decisions like getting involved between a petty criminal and Korean store owner. His good deed def comes off like he’s pals with the thief. If I was his wife, I’d get close to stabbing him over all his dumb decisions and how he doesn’t seem to love their baby besides keeping up a front or just to get his wife off his back. It shouldn’t take the threat of jail to wanna spend time w/ the kid. Good thing jazzy-voiced Ray checks his selfishness/victim mentality. It’s good we don’t know about the wife’s background until the end so we can leave sympathizing with everybody more.
I like that the MCs verge paths sooner than most books would but not crazy soon and that the romantic relationship stuff isn’t dragged out. The meeting w/ his father brings up a lot of unique points and good tension, possibilities of what could happen. Maybe Icarus’s purpose was obvious but I didn’t catch on until it was spelled out. The dream at the end is beautiful, the reality not unrealistically sappy.
Good As His Story Sunder from In Filth
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The early story detailing Lyle's family and his childhood/teenage years was great. Just the right amount of detail to pull me in and make me care. I wish there had been more about the girl in the diner (to give her details here would be a spoiler) and more about Lyle's mom after the arrest mentioned in the synopsis.
Throughout the middle and end of the story, I didn't feel a sense of urgency (even though the stakes were high for main character Lyle) and the whole Icarus plot was hella confusing. What/who was Icarus? I still don't know. I respect Clevenger as a writer and I feel I may have enjoyed this more in print.
I'm a Clevenger fan, but this was confusing
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WTF??!!
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