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City of the Lost [Dramatized Adaptation]
City of the Lost [Dramatized Adaptation]
City of the Lost [Dramatized Adaptation]
Audiobook5 hours

City of the Lost [Dramatized Adaptation]

Written by Stephen Blackmoore

Narrated by A Full Cast, James Konicek, Evan Casey and

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

About this audiobook

Joe Sunday has been a Los Angeles low-life for years, but his life gets a whole lot lower when he is killed by the rival of his crime boss-only to return as a zombie. His only hope is to find and steal a talisman that he learns can grant immortality. But, unfortunately for Joe, every other undead thug and crime boss in Los Angeles is looking for the same thing.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherGraphicAudio
Release dateJun 3, 2020
ISBN9781648793509
City of the Lost [Dramatized Adaptation]
Author

Stephen Blackmoore

Stephen Blackmoore is the Los Angeles-based author of the noir/urban fantasy Eric Carter series, including Dead Things, Broken Souls, Hungry Ghosts, Fire Season, Ghost Money, Bottle Demon, and the stand-alone City Of The Lost. He has written tie-in novels for the role-playing game Spirit of The Century (Khan of Mars), the video-game Wasteland 2 (All Bad Things) and the television series Heroes Reborn (Dirty Deeds), as well as part of the Gods and Monster series (Mythbreaker). His short stories can be found at Fireside Fiction, Plots With Guns, and in anthologies such as Urban Allies, Deadly Treats, Don't Read this Book, Uncage Me and many others.

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Reviews for City of the Lost [Dramatized Adaptation]

Rating: 3.903225838709677 out of 5 stars
4/5

31 ratings1 review

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A bloody fun whodunnit that should be the first in a series. I like that the "hero" was a bad guy. Fans of Anita Blake might enjoy this one.I winced so hard at the protagonist's treatment of and thought processes around a sex worker that he encountered. That was very problematic for me. Same for another character who was extremely short. I'm also not a fan of the 20-something PYT being a prize at the end.I was surprised at the above since I follow the author on Twitter, and he seems to be pretty socially aware. I'm not sure if it was just the character thinking like this (because there were other references that were more respectful), or if the author's own thought processes have changed.