This #PrivateEyeJuly #Podcast continues where the #magic is gone but the #monsters remain: #TheLastSmileinSunderCity by #LukeArnold

Good morning, my fellow creatives! During these cloudy, humid summer days, nothing strikes my fancy quite like a mystery.

Brilliant indie author and book reviewer S.J. Higbee recommended this book a while back, and at last I’ve found the perfect time to try it: The Last Smile in Sunder City by Luke Arnold.

Let’s take a sip together to taste the grit beneath the glitter…well, maybe that’s not the best metaphor here, but let’s, um….oh, let’s just try it.

If the embedded link recording is not showing up, you can click here to access the podcast site.

Next week I’ll actually take a little break from fantasy for a traditional mystery. You’ll see why soon. x

Read on, share on, and write on, my friends!

17 thoughts on “This #PrivateEyeJuly #Podcast continues where the #magic is gone but the #monsters remain: #TheLastSmileinSunderCity by #LukeArnold

    • Ha! I wouldn’t mind a bit of cold these days. The humidity here is thick enough to just coat the skin in sweat as one stands. Blech.
      It’s always a blessing to hear from you, my friend! xxxxx

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    • Aw, thanks, Neill! I did enjoy a bit of school theater back in the day. Character voices are such fun, though I will say nothing–NOTHING–beats Bo reading Roald Dahl’s THE TWITS as a Pepperpot from Monty Python. Pure joy. 🙂 xxxxxxx

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    • Oooo, fascinating! Yes, I’m banking that Fetch may not be quite human-ish, so I’ll have to keep reading. There’s just something about “modern” other-worlds with a history that gets me every time. 🙂 Oh, and I have CANTICLE! I want to use August as a sort of recommends month. My daughter Blondie’s already given me her list of things I HAVE to read, too. 🙂

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      • by the sounds of it a bit of a busy month- Canticle is good -although a but dated it has a universality. Definitely try Engine Summer, that is beautiful- although I am not too sure the first chapter is a gripper- more of a puzzler. Currently reading a People’s History of the United States (Howard Zinn). It is powerful, moving and depressing- its lessons inform all our civilisations and much of modern politics too. You would love it.

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