
The Dead Room
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Narrated by:
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Jim McCance
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By:
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Robert Ellis
Silence of the Lambs reborn in a gripping serial killer thriller.
Chestnut Hill is one of Philadelphia's most upscale neighborhoods. But in one gleaming home, in a teenager's lavish bedroom, a girl has been brutally murdered. The atrocity kicks off an investigation by police who connect the girl's murder to a bizarre string of increasingly disturbing murders.
A serial killer is loose—someone of unprecedented savagery.
As the city's panic rises, Teddy Mack, a civil attorney just out of law school, is forced by a partner at his new firm to defend the undefendable. But soon after, another girl goes missing. A girl who might still be alive. And Teddy discovers something the police never guessed.The serial killer has a secret. He's collecting something. Something twisted. Something horrific and vile.
To end the madman's reign, Teddy must enter his maze—a place of unimaginable terror where human demons emerge with a vengeance.
©2002-2014 Robert Ellis (P)2025 Robert EllisListeners also enjoyed...




















Good read
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Very good story
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Good story. Poor narrator
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Kept me interested
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12 hours and that's it?
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twist & turn
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Suspenseful
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Page turner
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very long
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Is there anything you would change about this book?
I would have preferred a smarter hero. Somehow to me this felt like a book that was written considerably earlier than 2012.If you’ve listened to books by Robert Ellis before, how does this one compare?
Haven't.What do you think the narrator could have done better?
Not sure. He just didn't click with me.Was The Dead Room worth the listening time?
Yes.The serial killer was unique and diabolically evil. I was horrified at his control of the plumbing in the basement. Oscar Holmes is such an easy victim to frame for a horrific murder. One look at him and you were convinced he was guilty, even without blood all over his hands and his skills as a butcher and his previous interaction with the victim....and on and on. One of my favorite parts was when Teddy discovered Oscar's paintings and thus revealed a different side of him. Teddy was under a lot of pressure. He had big law school loans to pay off & couldn't afford to lose his job. He was bright and a hard worker had a future--especially important to him after a childhood in the shadow of his father's disgrace (unjustly blamed for the murder of his partner). But when Teddy's boss Barnett tapped him to handle the murder case, Barnett kept important information from Teddy, not really wanting him to do a good job. Teddy, on the other hand, was determined to work hard at every assignment. To make matters worse, D.A. Andrews was grandstanding for the public --especially since law professor William Nash was contending Andrews had an innocent man executed, so the case was an even bigger hot potato, especially after Nash gets pulled into the Holmes case. On the other hand, Teddy did some incredibly stupid things. Getting involved with ADA Powell was an obvious conflict. Being lured to out-of-the-way spot where he finds another body makes the D.A. suspicious of him. (Why does he have to meet the witness for his other case in such an isolated spot? Never heard of coffee-shops?!) His boss Barnett is run over in his own driveway and the police seem to do a putrid job of investigating but Teddy finds and follows a trail of footprints the police didn't notice(?!) but does nothing to document this evidence; then he finds a very unusual shot glass, and is ambushed, & loses it. In retrospect, the book had a lot of really exciting bits, such as when Teddy inadvertantly brought danger to his own (mother's) backyard and when Teddy was followed to yet another isolated area & his car was sabotaged & went thru the ice....and he had to break into a house to avoid hypothermia... I just realized I may know why I felt as if the book was written in an earlier era....I grew up in PA so the place names are familiar from my chiildhood... e.g., a creek that is a tributary of the the Schuylkill River ran by my childhood home....maybe the names familiar to me from my childhood gave me that impression... In remembering more of the details about this book I've gone back & raised the story from three stars to four because there were a lot of really interesting happenings. And it was well plotted. I guess the plot would have been a lot less intricate with a hero smart enough to cut thru all the subterfuge faster.Any additional comments?
Think I covered everything - good & bad - above.Young naive hero led around by the nose
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