
Two for the Show
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Narrated by:
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R.C. Bray
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By:
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Jonathan Stone
Chas is a detective who doesn't stake out cheating husbands, track down missing persons, or match wits with femmes fatales. Instead of pounding the pavement, he taps a computer keyboard. He can get the goods on anyone, and it's all to make sure superstar Las Vegas mind reader Wallace the Amazing stays amazing. Thanks to Chas's steady stream of stealthy intel, Wallace's mental "magic" packs houses every night.
But when someone threatens to call the psychic showman's bluff, the sweet gig takes a sour - and sinister - turn. Who's the clean-cut couple gunning for Wallace with an arsenal of dirty tricks? Why does Wallace keep upping the ante instead of backing down? And just how much does Chas really know about his mysterious boss's life...or his own? The tangled truth - of blackmail, kidnapping, and false identities - quickly becomes the biggest case of his strange, secret career.
©2016 Jonathan Stone (P)2016 Brilliance Audio, all rights reserved.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Not what I thought it would be
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Deceptively Spun Mystery
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uuummm. I love Christopher Stone, but, well..
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Not even RC Bray could make this exciting
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When the author was relating the actual story this book was interesting, entertaining, and enjoyable but when the author felt like he was either called to preach or teach I was ready to figuratively pitch everything in the fireplace.
About burning a credit...not again for me. If an author wants to preach or teach, don't list the book under mysteries
Ethics 101 over and over and over again
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"Loquacious"
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Audible describes the genre as modern detective mystery/thriller. I describe it as a psychological thriller. It is really one hell of a story.
RC Bray is rapidly becoming one of my favorite narrators. His work here is superb!
Brilliant and magical psychological thriller!
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Ray Porter is great. But the writing was laconic
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Yes, that's right folks. In the author's own words. After hours of endless twists and reveals -- a dozen or more -- each more preposterous than the last, going from the ridiculous to the just plain stupid, Stone tells us that it all started when the narrator was born and it ended for reasons he will never know. And then he adds one postscript that says, this is all made up for show, and then another postscript that says, no it's real.
The sound you hear is my jaw dropping to the floor.
This may be the most poorly crafted book I have ever read or heard. There's a good premise here, one that Stone constantly and consistently undermines by going completely off the reservation. From start to finish, characters do things that are way beyond belief, that no real person in their right mind would even think of doing, so far-fetched that they're not merely non-credible but just plain stupid (sorry, I can't think of better adjective).
"Just a strange sordid sorrowful little tale," Stone writes, inadvertently nailing it in describing this as strange and sordid (sorrowful for the poor reader who listens to it). In a fit of colossal hubris, Stone writes, "Create a convincing universe -- inhabit it, populate it, command it to come alive. Make it indubitable. That's the signpost of mastery." Without irony, without the self-awareness to realize that his universe is not convincing in the least, that what is at work here is the opposite of mastery.
I listened to Stone's Moving Day and liked it a lot despite seeing that Stone violated the most basic rules of storytelling. The reason was that his characters had compelling motivation for their credulity-defying actions. In this book, the lengths to which they go for the purpose of putting on a Las Vegas magic show, their motives so inscrutable that Stone specifically declines to name them, is just beyond the pale. I will not be reading him again. Ever.
The Precise Moment It All Went Wrong
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Disappointed with Jonathan Stone
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