whoever decided to change the hobgoblin's voice actor from jeff harding to robert chase in the 1990 moomin show i hope i never catch you in the streets for what you took away from me 😭😭

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whoever decided to change the hobgoblin's voice actor from jeff harding to robert chase in the 1990 moomin show i hope i never catch you in the streets for what you took away from me 😭😭
i watched a thing | The Fast Show
Kings of the Wyld by Nicholas Eames It’s a story of a band of “heroes” getting back together for one last hurrah. The fun part about it is the “band of heroes” is treated like an old rock band going back on tour after saying they never will again. The even more fun part is the fact that it’s a stand alone book. Just this one and that’s it. No trilogy or cycle. Just ONE book. I didn’t know authors were allowed to make single books anymore.
THE WOMAN IN THE WOODS by John Connolly | book 16 in the Charlie Parker series | read by Jeff Harding | rating: 4.5 out of 5 | http://www.cherrymischievous.com/2018/05/the-woman-in-woods.html
Dennis Andries vs. Jeff Harding I: No Running, No Hugging just Slugging
Dennis Andries vs. Jeff Harding I: No Running, No Hugging just Slugging
By Gerardo Granados: Back in June 24th of 1989 at the Convention Center, Atlantic City, USA; veteran WBC light heavyweight Dennis Andries W34(21)-L7-D2 faced a young hungry lion named Jeff Harding W14(1)-L0-D0 who was a replacement for Donny Lalonde who pulled out of the fight due religious beliefs just a few weeks before the bout. (more…)
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Review: EVERY DEAD THING
Every Dead Thing by John Connolly Read by Jeff Harding Book 1 of Charlie Parker series Genre: crime fiction Format: unabridged audiobook
About Every Dead Thing:
Now available in trade paperback, the first installment of the Charlie Parker series by internationally bestselling author John Connolly. Haunted by the unsolved slayings of his wife and daughter, former New York City detective Charlie Parker is a man consumed by guilt, regret, and the desire for revenge. When his search for a missing woman leads him to the killer who destroyed his family, Parker knows payback time has come at last. Aided by a beautiful young psychologist and two career criminals, Parker soon becomes the bait in a trap set in the balmy bayous of Louisiana to catch a murderer unlike any other — a monster who believes himself to be an artist and uses the human body as his canvas. Driven by his visions of the dead and the voice of an old Creole psychic, Parker must seek — and win — a final brutal confrontation with the serial killer known as the Traveling Man. Every Dead Thing is a richly textured, intricately plotted novel that probes the mind of a tormented man whose buried instincts — for love, survival, and even killing — awaken as he confronts a monster beyond imagining and relentlessly pursues justice for the murder of his family.
Source: Info in the About Every Dead Thing was taken from GoodReads at http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/175242.Every_Dead_Thing on 08/09/2012.
My Thoughts:
I picked this book up just because I met John Connolly on his book tour when The Wrath of Angels was released and I was impressed of how nice and down to earth the man is despite the success of his books and the fame. So I decided to try out his work. There was a chapter which confused me a little where the narration continually swapped from a "Goldilocks" and an "autopsy". I didn't know whether Charlie was dreaming or going mad or thinking aloud. Or was it suppose to direct the readers' thinking in a certain direction?... This book also reminded me why crime fiction is not my genre, because I am not fond of gore stories, which most crime fiction inevitably is, including this one. Although compared to other crime fiction books, Every Dead Thing, may not be as gory in the gore-rating. Still, gory enough for me. The plot is twisty enough to keep you guessing and the world building is masterful! I also appreciate John Connolly's wry humour. A book which makes me laugh would always get lots and lots of kudos and higher rating from me. Add humour to a compelling author's voice and you get a must-read book!
Empirical Evaluation: Story telling quality = 5 Character development = 5 Story itself = 4 Ending = 4.5 World building = 5 Cover art = 4 Pace = (15 hrs and 45 mins listening time) Plot = 5 Narrator = 4.5 Overall Rating: 4.5 out of 5 cherries
BlogInk:
This review is also my entry to the blogink competition. Wish me luck!