Banquet of Consequences: A Juror's Plight
The Carnation Murders Trial of Michele Anderson, Volume 1
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Narrado por:
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John Torrente
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De:
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Paul Sanders
On Christmas Eve 2007, Judy and Wayne Anderson's daughter, Michele, and her boyfriend, Joseph McEnroe, arrived at their home for a family meal.
Unbeknownst to them, their daughter was armed with a loaded 9 mm pistol, and McEnroe was carrying a .357 Magnum. Both parents were callously shot dead by the pair, and their bodies were hidden from view.
Two and a half hours later, Michele's brother, Scott, his wife, Erica, and their two children, Olivia (5) and Nathan (3), arrived at the house. Within the hour they, too, had been pitilessly slain in an act of violence that was breathtaking in its scope and cruelty.
With his highly anticipated third audiobook, Paul Sanders takes the listener inside every day of the trial of Michele Anderson, with his customary attention to detail, from December 2015 until March 2016.
And in a unique digression from his other works, Sanders includes something he has never done before: an interview with one of the killers, Joseph McEnroe, at Walla Walla Penitentiary.
Banquet of Consequences is the first of two books on what came to be known as the Carnation murders. Were the killings a premeditated act, or had the defendants acted in self-defense? And what of the deaths of Olivia and Nathan? Who shot them and why? It would not be an easy task for a jury to decide.
Look for book two: The Carnation Murders, Beyond the Pale: Rogue Juror - the Joseph McEnroe Death Penalty Trial.
©2017 Paul Sanders (P)2017 Paul SandersLos oyentes también disfrutaron:
Be sure to listen to a sample so you can be prepared for the narrator.
The narrator is slow (I had to speed up the narration), says labels instead of lapels, doesn't pause for punctuation and makes runon sentences and hence nonsequiturs. He's monotone and sounds like he's reading. Torrente needs to go listen to George Guidall and learn how to narrate a book.
I'm so sad the other books have the same narrator.
Paul has GOT to lose this narrator
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Pretty boring.
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The narrator used a "sing song" cadence, especially when reading female dialogues.
In spite of these drawbacks, it was a very interesting account of Michelle Anderson's trial for her part in the "Carnation" murders.
Good story, awful narrator!
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This is merely re hash of trail testimony! There is no backgroud on the people involved!
And the reader is horrible, sounds like a robot!
Disappointed
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The story is the recounting of a horrific crime but there is no mystery about it. It is about as suspenseful as reading court transcripts. Lots of details that add nothing to the overall story. I love true crime books and powered through it with the hope it would get better, but it never did.
Horrible narration
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