The Necromancer's House Audiobook By Christopher Buehlman cover art

The Necromancer's House

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The Necromancer's House

By: Christopher Buehlman
Narrated by: Todd Haberkorn
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"You think you got away with something, don't you? But your time has run out. We know where you are. And we are coming." The man on the screen says this in Russian. "Who are you?" The man smiles, but it's not a pleasant smile. The image freezes. The celluloid burns exactly where his mouth is, burns in the nearly flat U of his smile. His eyes burn, too. The man fades, leaving the burning smiley face smoldering on the screen. "Oh Christ," Andrew says. The television catches fire.

Andrew Ranulf Blankenship is a handsome, stylish nonconformist with wry wit, a classic Mustang, and a massive library. He is also a recovering alcoholic and a practicing warlock, able to speak with the dead through film. His house is a maze of sorcerous booby traps and escape tunnels, as yours might be if you were sitting on a treasury of Russian magic stolen from the Soviet Union thirty years ago. Andrew has long known that magic was a brutal game requiring blood sacrifice and a willingness to confront death, but his many years of peace and comfort have left him soft, more concerned with maintaining false youth than with seeing to his own defense. Now a monster straight from the pages of Russian folklore is coming for him, and frost and death are coming with her.

©2013 Christopher Buehlman (P)2013 Tantor
Classics Contemporary Fantasy Fiction Historical Horror Paranormal Paranormal & Urban Scary Magic Magic Users Russia

Critic reviews

"The logic of the plot is eclipsed by the eruption of characters who evoke Dickensian whimsy and range from the merely unusual to the bizarrely imaginative. Within this magical universe, rivalries, revenge, and self-seeking contend with the willingness to sacrifice." ( Publishers Weekly)
Fascinating Magic System • Well-developed Characters • Unique Storytelling • Clever Plot Twists • Emotional Depth

Highly rated for:

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I enjoyed the story and reader. My only complaint is Chapter titles would have made it easier to follow.

Scary!

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It took me a few chapters to get into a rhythm with this. I definitely wasn’t able to put it on and do anything that required me to concentrate too hard. lol I kept having to rewind it when I missed something.

It may just be me, it required my full brain for a while until I got into the groove of it. That being said, I enjoyed it immensely and highly recommend.

Good book but not something I could multitask with

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Wish this had half stars or was out of ten


I like the pacing. It’s almost like poetry at times. It’s weirdly dark and turns some relatively common magical tropes into more interesting takes on standard magical “spells”. I’m Canadian, He mentions Canada a few times. Bonus points…

Very good. Almost a five

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Would you consider the audio edition of The Necromancer's House to be better than the print version?

Having read all three of Christopher Buehlman's published horror novels now, I can say that it has been a treat following his success. I know the author from his Renaissance Faire performances and have been a huge fan of his work there for years. I have to say that this book begins much like his performance work at Faire. "Unapologetic-ally Descriptive" was what a friend of mine and I came up with when we discussed the book over a few beers when we were both finished with it. Christopher Buehlman has a knack for painting a very detailed picture with his words. And that's how he hooks you!

In addition to his descriptive prowess, he is not afraid to delve into psychology and personal stories with his characters. And in this way, side characters who may not begin as characters you care about become Very important to you throughout the story.

The narrator on this work was great overall. The pacing and performance aided in a couple of "driveway moments" for me. However, I could not give the narrator a full 5 star rating like I wanted to because he MISPRONOUNCED the author's name. How does one mispronounce an author's name that they are narrating??? I am shocked that the narrator was not asked to re-record that one piece or that another voice was not hired to provide a recording of the book credentials.

Creative and engaging

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The reading performance was excellent. It included multiple accents and easily distinguishable male and female voices. I would definitely check out more from the reader.

I am a fan of the author's other works, and it seems like this was the hardest of his novels to adapt to audio.

Unlike "Between two fires" or "Those across the river", this story bounces around to different locations and timelines, which makes it difficult to follow in an audio version.

I love the author, and the reader was excellent. I would still, however, recommend listening to one of the author's other books first, or just physically reading this one.

Trldr...good story, good reading, but the two don't match up well.

Well performed, not ideal for audio.

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As I've come to expect, an excellent book!! The only regret is that it's over.

You won't be disappointed!!

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"The Necromancer's House" isn't Christopher Buehlman's best book ("The Blacktongue Thief" holds that honor), but it's still a solid, well-plotted story with interesting characters and a fascinating take on the existence of magic and a community of mages in the modern world. If you enjoy Niel Gaiman or Joe Abercrombie, you should find this book to be right up your street...

IF you can get past Todd Haberkorn's narration. I don't know if Mr. Haberkorn has dyslexia, or simply needs to take a vocabulary class, but I have never in my life listened to an audiobook that left me shouting corrections at my headphones.

"but the dezinens of Oswego..." ""Did you mean 'DENIZENS?'"
"they piled her with drinks..." "I actually think they 'PLIED' her with drinks, don't you?!?"
"not knowing the lyrics was no impeedment to singing along..." "Did you mean 'IMPEDIMENT," TODD? F-ing IMPEDIMENT???"

Etc., etc., etc. Probably every 10 minutes or so there's a mispronounced, misread or wholly invented word (that isn't in the text; I own the book) that changes the meaning of the sentence and pulls you out of the story completely. Haberkorn's characterizations are good, but damn he needs a remedial reading course.

Well-written book marred by an irritating reader

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I loved the description of this book and was excited when I started it but the story was too disjointed and hard to keep track of what was going on. It did not flow smoothly. Todd Haberkorn's voicing was the only thing that kept me listening. As always he did a amazing performance. If I had been reading the book in stead of listening, I probably would have put it down. The story was good just had no real flow and was choppy.

Gerta performance but disjointed story.

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Well. I REALLY enjoyed ‘Between Two Fires’… then I really enjoyed‘Black Tounged Thief’
But this one confused me.
There’s a lot of borrowed material.
Not just from Russian Lore but Japanese animation.
It’s so weird to me how these references even entered this novel having read the two aforementioned novels first.
There was still a familiar originality but the parts that seemed stolen from pop culture were disappointing.
Like I mentioned in the title, I may be missing something.
I’m experimenting with this author and am otherwise extremely impressed with his work. This one just sent me for a loop.

Maybe I’m missing something…

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This is the kind of book that is best read with absolutely zero context beforehand. It’s asking you to go in blind at breakneck speed and put the pieces together yourself, who is imho a fantastic metaphor for some of the themes in this book, especially that of radical acceptance. And as someone who’s been in recovery for over a decade, this is the first book I’ve read that has not only woven the themes of recovery into not only into a characters arc, but has married it to the incredible magic system that Buehlman creates here. This is my second Buehlman book (the first being the incomparable Between Two Fires—GO READ IT) and I honestly have to say I love love love the way this dude writes!

Fast paced found family weirdo goodness

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