Psychosis Diagnosis Audiobook By Nikki Minty cover art

Psychosis Diagnosis

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Psychosis Diagnosis

By: Nikki Minty
Narrated by: Ari Maza Long, Jodie Harris, James Fouhey, Tamblyn Lord, Karen Chilton
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About this listen

Welcome to The Church of Salvation, where your soul checks in but never checks out.

Raised by his drug-addicted mother in the small town of Coraki, Australia, Monroe Morgan is determined to escape a life steeped in misery. With dreams of a better future, he has secured a job at his brother-in-law’s pub in Coffs Harbour and is set to start as soon as he turns eighteen.

However, a month before his departure, Monroe’s life takes a drastic turn when his neighbour, Indi, appears at his doorstep, battered and scared for her life. She reveals harrowing details about her upbringing in The Church of Salvation and declares that she is being forced to marry the church’s pastor against her will. Concerned for Indi’s safety, Monroe plans to take her with him when he leaves. But on the morning of their escape, he is jolted awake by blood-curdling screams coming from next door. A violent confrontation with Indi’s father ensues, resulting in Monroe’s arrest and a year-long stay in Rozelle Hospital for drug-induced psychosis. In a cruel twist of fate, Indi’s father denies her existence, and the doctors and authorities dismiss her as a figment of Monroe’s imagination.

After a year of treatment and recovery, Monroe returns to Coraki determined to find Indi and prove she is real. However, the visit to his old neighbourhood soon unearths a web of dark secrets, and he finds himself at the centre of a decades-old cult conspiracy. He’ll have to summon all his strength to discover not only where Indi went, but who he truly is, before more young women mysteriously wind-up dead.

©2025 Nikki Minty (P)2025 Nikki Minty
International Mystery & Crime Mystery Psychological Thriller & Suspense Exciting
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4.75 out of 5 stars
Psychosis Diagnosis hooked me from the jump with its eerie, disorienting premise — and it only got more compelling from there. Monroe Morgan’s voice felt so real, so raw, and so chaotic that I constantly found myself questioning what was real and what was imagined, right alongside him. The central mystery and Monroe’s fervent need to prove Indi’s existence had me fully locked in.

The use of multiple narrators added a ton of dimension. Ari Maza Long delivered such a grounded, believable performance that you could feel the desperation, and he really rooted the entire audiobook. The full-cast format made it feel like I was listening to a dramatized series, not just an audiobook. Really ramping up to help make those tense and chilling moments hit hard. I enjoyed each voice, but a few stood out, especially Enzo’s chapters with that smooth Louisiana drawl. I could have listened to him talk occult history for hours.

The plot itself? Wild and unpredictable. Just when I thought I had a grip on the cult storyline, it morphed. Touching on addiction, family trauma, and even the supernatural. That said, I wanted more from the cult aspect. I wanted to understand the daily life, the beliefs, the psychological grip — instead, we mostly see the leadership, and only brief glimpses of those trapped inside.

I’m not even going to call it a downside, but a personal preference/being nitpicky; I think this could’ve been even more powerful sticking strictly to Monroe’s POV. Letting the reader discover things as he does would have heightened the unreliable narrator vibe and the slow unraveling of reality. But even with that, it was a story that kept me pressing play, needing answers, and never quite sure who, or what, to believe.

Bottom line: Psychosis Diagnosis isn’t your typical thriller. It’s a genre-defying slow-burn mystery wrapped in psychological horror and cultic dread. Disturbing, immersive, and wholly unique. And don’t forget the performance. I enjoyed this one, even though it messed with my head!

Eerie & Disorienting In a Good Way

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