Please Don't Tell My Parents I'm Queen of the Dead
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Narrado por:
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Penelope Graham
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De:
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Richard Roberts
Avery Special is the world's only living necromancer, and she's pretty bad at it. She also just moved to LA, where trouble has been waiting for a necromancer. Trouble that doesn't care how strong she is or that she's only 15. Monsters, magical artifacts, occultists, and television producers only care that a real necromancer is back.
There are definitely upsides. Chris, Annie, Sue, and Peggy have their own creepy superpowers and are the best friends a girl could hope to make on her first day in a new city. Her Pudgy Bunny coloring book can teach her more than a stack of grimoires. Her ghostly ancestors are so eager to help it's annoying.
Not that she has time for any of that, because Chris and Sue are both in love with her.
©2022 Richard Roberts (P)2022 David N. WilsonLos oyentes también disfrutaron:
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Edging uncomfortably close
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There is alot of focus on the developing bisexual poly relationship between the main character and 2 of her friends. The relationship exploration was done pretty poorly. The MC treats everyone badly even taking into account the author portrayed her as self righteous and a self centered teenager.
The character development definitely didn’t feel up to the authors previous levels and the MC felt very one dimensional and frankly unlikeable. The parents also appeared to be cookie cutter stereotypes (rich parents, southern, new age, working mom) interactions felt more like an afterthought than driving even a minor subplot.
Storyline was decent and interesting enough to keep me entertained but not like the previous volumes which had me hooked and I’ve relistened to multiple times. A few throwback references and characters were included to the prior world building. Unlike the prior books the school and school life played a minor role and didn’t seem to matter to the storyline, you could easily age the characters to 18-25 year olds in college and it wouldn’t change the story much.
Loved the concepts but it felt hurried/forced/censored, author introduces the concept of discrimination but didn’t explore it, touched on colonialism but didn’t explore it.
Definitely not a reason to abandon the series and worth a listen. I’m looking forward to another sequel to see what happens next.
Not up to the standard of the previous books
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she reads 30% slower than most other narrators.
i had to crank the listening speed up to 1.3x to make it sound like story was at normal speeds instead of being read in slow motion.
that being said this was much better thant the last book.
if there aren't going to be any more stories about penny then out of the protagonists from the last two books Avery is a much more interesting character to follow in comparison to Magenta
slow narrator
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Good story but a dead end
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but besides that it is a good story with a good continuation of building off the original series with just enough call backs and tenderness to the original series to remind you they are in the same universe
I like it but not as good as the others
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