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The Scream  By  cover art

The Scream

By: Craig Spector, John Skipp
Narrated by: William Dufris
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Publisher's summary

Rock 'n' Roll. Hell. Two great tastes that taste great together. Long before Elvis gyrated on the Sullivan Show or the Beatles toiled the smoky red-light bars of Hamburg, music has been sowing the seeds of liberation. Or damnation. With each new generation the edge of rebellion pushed farther. Rhythms quickened. Volume increased. Lyrics coarsened. The rules continued to be broken, until it seemed that there were no rules at all.

And as waves of teens cranked it up and poured it on, parents built walls of accusation to explain their offspring's seeming corruption. Sex and drugs, demon worship and violence are the effects. Music is the cause. Or so the self-styled guardians of morality would have us believe.

Meet The Scream. Just your average everyday mega-cult band. Their music is otherworldly. Their words are disturbing. Their message is unholy. Their fans are legion. And they're not kidding. They're killing. Themselves. Each other. Everyone. Their gospel screams from the lips of babes. Their backbeat has a body count. And their encore is just the warm-up act to madness beyond belief.

It emerged from a war-torn jungle, where insanity was just another word for survival. It arrived in America with an insatiable lust for power and the means to fulfill it. In the amplified roar of arena applause there beats the heart of absolute darkness.

©2001 John Skipp & Craig Spector (P)2012 David N. Wilson

What listeners say about The Scream

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Good book -- TERRIBLE NARRATION

Any additional comments?

If you Craig Spector and John Skipp’s other two novels on Audible, you know they’re REALLY good writing horror. I couldn’t download The Scream fast enough based on their other work. And I was not disappointed by their inventiveness, depth of character and general achievement that would have this book up in Stephen King’s best work if this had his name on it. I’m still surprised I hadn’t heard these guys much sooner.

So when I saw the other Audible review sinking this book’s score due to bad narration, it kind of annoyed me. Because I see bad scores all the time for narration that is not really bad at all. The people in my life I try to get to try Audible always complain how they can’t get used to so and so’s voice, etc. It seems infantile to me. So I figured it was that kind of sitch.

No. No way. I was wrong. I’ve heard bad narration like this on a few other books. I can get to a point where I ignore his voice after a while and just follow the story. It takes a level of meditation that isn’t easy, haha. Dufris seems to be channeling a 90s style of narration I heard from Ron McLarty on Black Sunday, like this weird breathy delivery that seems like it’s meant to recall an old folktale via an ominous dream. Here it goes all over the place in parts reminding me of McLarty and later Jeff Gurner from Whiplash River performance where he goes from sounding like a movie trailer voice to game show host. Man I hated that performance.

Dufris engages the story like your little brother trying to be scary on Halloween. It was like reading a book in that green monster font that nobody takes seriously. The voice always on the verge of “muah-ha-ha-ha!” But then it changes later depending on the character, but always going for the most cliche, cardboard version possible.

Did the audiobook’s director tell Dubfris to suck on purpose?? “Hell, a book about a rock band called The Scream? These idiots will buy anything! Just sell the mood, Dufris and I’ll be back in a few hours. Any questions, the guy running the board can tell you what to do.”

That’s assuming Dufris didn’t just record the files on his iPhone while running errands.

The narration IS rather hard to take. I am not wondering any more why the other Spector/Skipp books weren’t made available on Audible. This book probably spoiled the catalogue.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    1 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    3 out of 5 stars

Never Before

Is there anything you would change about this book?

The narrator.

What was your reaction to the ending? (No spoilers please!)

Didn't make it that far.

What didn’t you like about William Dufris’s performance?

Everything.

Any additional comments?

I am a great lover of Audible, and its offerings. I have listened to many, many audio books over the duration of my membership, and even though the majority of the narrators are stellar, there are some that understandably are not. This has never deterred me from finishing. I have never before stopped listening to a book until it is completed. This was an exception. I really could not stand one more second of this fellow. I do believe the storyline was good, and worth finishing, but as I have stated, I just could not continue. I probably will get the hard copy and go from there. Sorry if you liked his performance, but I found it just too much to handle, with the singing, the baby noises, all much too much. The snippet I listened to prior to purchases didn't seem too bad, but after multiple hours it became like nails on a chalk board for me. If I could give the narrator half a star I would.

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