Virtual Voice Sample
  • The Inhumanoids

  • Real Encounters with Beings that can't Exist!
  • By: Barton M Nunnelly
  • Narrated by: Virtual Voice
  • Length: 19 hrs and 43 mins
  • 4.6 out of 5 stars (21 ratings)

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The Inhumanoids

By: Barton M Nunnelly
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
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This title uses virtual voice narration

Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
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Publisher's summary

Inhumanoids are creatures or entities that have some type of human characteristic but are not human at all. Even though they sometimes appear as 'less than human,' they are quite beyond the normal sense of the word and possess a troubling array of supernatural powers to prove the point. Some are true 'bi-forms;' curious anthropomorphic mixtures of human and animals, while others manifest themselves in guises that one might pass by on the street and never give a second glance. From the smallest fairy to the tallest giant and every form in between, these inhumanoid beings, in all their myriad forms, have been with us since the beginnings of recorded history and beyond. Every culture knows the inhumanoids quite well. Since the dawn of time man has encountered such creatures, which simply cannot be explained away using conventional zoological science. In fact, all that we 'know' of mainstream biology, zoology and anthropology scream in unison that creatures like 'The Spottsville Monster' cannot possibly exist at all. Yet people see these beings, and a host of others of the same bizarre ilk, much more frequently than many would suspect. In researching this book I was struck by the sheer number of alleged inhumanoid encounters reported to have taken place; thousands upon thousands. As a consequence of the sheer magnitude of such data, this work merely attempts to scratch the surface of that very old, long list.

What listeners say about The Inhumanoids

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Reminiscent of keel

Structured like a john keel book. Ai voice is fine. Good variety of subjects and eye witness accounts.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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The clear document dates of encounters.

This is a wonderful book. Very interesting and insightful. I would recommend it completely and suggest researching afterwards.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Bart is the man

Well researched. Well written. Outstanding book. No fluff. No opinions. Just facts. Must have taken years to write

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Shocked at the variety of beasties people have encountered!

There are wayyyy too many accounts for them all to be hoaxes. This world definitley harbors some creatures we have no knowledge of. Or maybe they aren't of this world at all? Either way, you can't explain them all away as hallucinations or fantasy.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Interesting and entertaining, virtual voice is bad

Entertaining book, about what you'd expect, Though, I wasn’t expecting the sudden left turn into hysterical religiosity at the very end…

Mostly I wanted to comment on the virtual voice. It's lightyears better than in years past, but it's still not there. The inflections will be off, some words are consistently mispronounced, and there will be strange, long pauses in the middle of sentences. If you're going to use a virtual voice, at least do an editing pass to remove image captions and things that the virtual voice will read oddly. Or, just use a real narrator, that's clearly still the best option.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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too preachy

it is too preachy but it's also has Darwin dismantling religion which I agree with Darwin

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In need of editing

Inhumanoids needed a copy editor, a general thesis, and a solid and consistent voice that carried the narrative which was really under-developed. The AI narration was seriously lacking and a distraction from the content which was already difficult to follow. The content wasn’t organized or presented in a coherent or logical way within each chapter and with the AI reading without inflection, without regard for pauses, and without regard for subject changes, it was really hard to concentrate on the subject matter. The author has created a selection of anecdotes or reports for each chapter’s subject but within each chapter there’s little to link the retellings. The examples given jump around in time and in geography haphazardly. Beyond this, occasionally the author decides to write using his own voice which is jarring in a book that reads like a disorganized encyclopedic retelling but also when he does begin writing in his voice, he’s offering his opinion which is in full agreement with himself. Of course he’s read and referenced John Keel, Loren Coleman, Jerome Clark, to name a few, but it’s not clear why he’s referencing these guys because he doesn’t develop any main points (other than the government is “in” on it “all”), any clear motifs (other than these accounts are all true), and no summations that bring in any meaningful insight to the topics. Lastly at least for this little review, the author mentions people being “Fortean” many times in the book but never bothers to assign a definition or even loose parameters to the reach of the word, which has really different meanings depending on the person, context, and time and place in which the person lived, worked or researched. This is a long audio book to plow through given the gripes I listed above. I was tired and disappointed by the end.

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