Acquired Audiobook By: I started to listen to audiobooks in [2016] as a way to offset my readings of print books whilst noting there was a rumour about how audiobooks could help curb chronic migraines as you are switching up how your reading rather than allowing only one format to be your bookish choice. As I found colouring and knitting agreeable companions to listening to audiobooks, I have embarked on a new chapter of my reading life where I spend time outside of print editions of the stories I love reading and exchange them for audio versions. Through hosting for the Audiobookworm I’ve expanded my knowledge of authors who are producing audio versions of their stories whilst finding podcasters who are sharing their bookish lives through pods (ie. AudioShelf and Talking Audiobooks; see my sidebar). Meanwhile, I am also curating my own wanderings in audio via my local library who uses Overdrive for their digital audiobook catalogue whilst making purchase requests for audio CDs. It is a wonderful new journey and one I enjoy sharing – I am hoping to expand the percentage of how many audios I listen to per year starting in 2018.
Similar to the blog tour for the sixth novel of the #KayHunter series, the blog tour review copies are being provided directly by the author off-site from Audible. The key reason I decided to not accept the review copies from “Gone to Ground”, “Bridge to Burn”, “Cradle to Grave” and “Turn to Dust” is because the new format is mostly directed for mobile listeners and I do not listen to audiobooks in that style of format. Eventually as I want to have a full set of all the Kay Hunter installments – I will be purchasing the ones I am missing from Audible to house them all in one place unless I find them available on mp3 CD – until then, I was able to join this lovely blog tour because the audiobooks are readily available via Scribd! For which, I am especially grateful as I can continue to listen to one of my beloved and favourite Crime Drama series!
Thereby my copy of “Turn to Dust” is self-provided through my subscription to Scribd rather than being provided with a complimentary copy of the story. Thereby, I am choosing to participate on the audiobook tour, sharing my ruminations with my readers for my own edification but also, as a continuation of a reader’s love for a dramatic crime serial. I did not receive compensation for my opinions or thoughts shared herein.
What hooked me into the eighth installment of this series “Cradle to Grave”:
When you first begin Cradle to Grave, the title itself was percolating round my mind a bit – as I being a ready listener to the series now, I knew it was murmuring a glimpse of a hint towards the central plot of the story. I hadn’t caught on to what it implied – as I went a different direction in my mind than what was ultimately revealled but I liked where Amphlett took her motivation to tell the story and how that served a central arc of exploration as it was quite a perceptive point of entry once you realise what it is referencing directly.
You get spoilt by how quickly you are inserted into these detective’s lives – where you forget that they have emotional baggage of their own and that for some of them, certain cases are going to affect their mental health moreso than others. This was the case I felt for Gavin who was taking this case especially hard as each time he attempted to make any kind of lead-way, he was being confounded by more dead ends. For a case which felt time sensitive, it was not the kind of process a detective could resolve in their heart of hearts – not when a missing child needed to be found sooner than later.
Happily as we are quite a far afield into the series now – Kay isn’t the only perspective we are focusing on now. Other characters are stepping forward into the foreground – where they can take the ‘lead’ focus for different sequences whilst Kay is still actively working the case in the background and/or delegating her other duties given the role Sharpe appointed her as she’s not just a lead investigator now. This became my mainstay of joy for Cradle to Grave – getting to hear the other characters have more ‘on-scene’ time in your ears – as they are beautifully developed by Ms Campbell and they are lovingly etched out by Ms Amphlett. Due to this the series feels fuller somehow as the team isn’t just a ragtag family of investigators – but they feel authentically true to themselves and the nature of their jobs.
One note of interest to reveal – as I wasn’t sure how I’d feel about the shift in points-of-view from what was previously established early-on in the Kay Hunter series? Amphlett used to feature the villains in her stories on such a high level of disclosure, it was always a bit hard to progress through those passages because of how dark the story felt whilst you were in those sections of the audiobooks. Campbell did well to pull you through them – but there was a point where I noticed there was a general shift to re-establish the series back into the police perspective and keep this more anchoured in a dramatic crime focused through the police procedural thread of interest moreso than in re-shifting off Kay and the villains themselves.
By this installment, I can tell the switch was well-timed because it establishes what I loved about watching Rizzoli and Isles – you feel more connected to the detectives themselves and as such, the series re-evolves itself to be even more emotionally centred on their lives rather than just focusing in on how their solving the cases which test their strengths and their patience to solve the impossible on a time-clock which is constantly working against them.
-quoted from my review of Cradle to Grave
Turn To Dust
Subtitle: A Detective Kay Hunter Novel
by Rachel Amphlett
When the body of a naked man is found in the middle of a barren field, a rural community is left in shock - and fear.
Discovering that someone is offering money in return for information about the dead man and anyone connected to him, Detective Kay Hunter realises there is a dark side to the victim’s past. When a key witness disappears and a web of deceit and lies threatens to derail the investigation, she fears the worst. Can Kay and her team of detectives find out who is behind the man’s murder before another victim is targeted?
Places to find the book:
ASIN: B088KV7NJ6
Also by this author: Scared to Death, Will to Live, One to Watch, Hell to Pay, Call to Arms, Author Inteview: Rachel Amphlett (Gone to Ground), Gone to Ground, Bridge to Burn, Cradle to Grave
Also in this series: Scared to Death, Will to Live, One to Watch, Hell to Pay, Call to Arms, Gone to Ground, Bridge to Burn, Cradle to Grave
Published by Saxon Publishing
on 14th May, 2020
Length: 7 hours and 56 minutes (unabridged)
Published by: Saxon Publishing
Audiobooks by: Audiobook Factory (@audiofactoryuk)
Order of the Kay Hunter Detective series:
Scared to Death | Book One (see also Review)
Will to Live | Book Two (see also Review)
One to Watch | Book Three (see also Review)
Hell to Pay | Book Four (see also Review)
Call to Arms | Book Five (see also Review)
Gone to Ground | Book Six (see also Review)
Bridge to Burn | Book Seven (see also Review)
Cradle to Grave | Book Eight (see also Mini Review)
Turn to Dust | Book Nine
Why I am spotlighting this audiobook today:
This is a series which has become an addictive and chilling Contemporary Police Procedural dramatic crime narrative which I have many fond memories of listening to throughout the course of the blog tours attached to each new release. I was thankful to have found the series when I had in [2018] and it is hard to fathom how after two years, we’re *celebrating!* the ninth release!
This Summer, I returnt to Scribd and as I wasn’t sure when Turn to Dust would become available for me to enjoy, I decided to sign on the blog tour this time round to host an extract from the audiobook as well as mention a few reasons why I love this series as much as I do – hopefully inspiring new listeners to the series to give this a bit of a try to see if it matches their own tastes for Crime Dramas and Contemporary Thrillers. Over the next few weeks, I’ll be re-enjoying the past few Kay Hunter audiobooks (via Scribd) leading into listening to Turn to Dust. It will be the first installment of the series I haven’t listened to on a deadline and I believe it will be the best unexpected joy I’ve had in a long while with a beloved series!
What hooked me into the series directly is the writing style and tone of Ms Amphlett whilst her words are elevated to another level of entrance by her narrator Alison Campbell. You cannot fully understand what the difference is from reading a print copy of this series to listening to the audiobook series until you’ve given Ms Campbell a chance to settle into your ears and give you an emotionally charged audible play which touches your heart and leaves you emotionally spent at the end of the installments!
I look forward to bringing my full reaction and comments about Turn to Dust on a future #CrimeFicFridays – my new featured day for reviewing dramatic Crime Fiction and the Mysteries, stories of Suspense & Thriller which grace my life for their riveting stories and their seriously realistic lead characters. You will lose copious amount of tears listening to this series but you will also be uplifted by the courageous strength and the moxie of Kay Hunter herself – how she refuses to back down from a challenge and she fights back when life has an unkind way of throwing her curveballs. She’s an incredible heroine for today’s Contemporary Thriller reader – but it is how Amphlett balances her professional life with her personal life which happily rounds this into a lovely illuminated dramatic crime series!
Until then, I hope this shout-out of joy for a series
I love might INSPIRE you to consider making it one of your #nextlistens!
Which authors & narrators of Crime Fiction do you currently LOVE on audio?
Find out why I LOVE listening to Alison Campbell’s narration with this lovely extract from “Turn to Dust” – the ninth installment of a series I’m wicked addicted too!
This blog tour is courtesy of Audiobookworm Promotions:
Be sure to follow the blog tour route to see what else awaits you!
NOTE: Similar to blog tours wherein I feature book reviews, book spotlights (with or without extracts), book announcements (or Cover Reveals) – I may elect to feature an author, editor, narrator, publisher or other creative person connected to the book, audiobook, Indie film project or otherwise creative publishing medium being featured wherein the supplemental content on my blog is never compensated monetarily nor am I ever obligated to feature this kind of content. I provide (98.5%) of all questions and guest topics regularly featured on Jorie Loves A Story. I receive direct responses back to those enquiries by publicists, literary agents, authors, blog tour companies, etc of whom I am working with to bring these supplemental features and showcases to my blog. I am naturally curious about the ‘behind-the-scenes’ of stories and the writers who pen them: I have a heap of joy bringing this content to my readers. Whenever there is a conflict of connection I do disclose those connections per post and disclose the connection as it applies.
{SOURCES: The Kay Hunter series book covers (all individual titles), the biography of Rachel Amphlett and the narrator, Alison Campbell as well as the blog tour banner, the audiobook promo banner. the host badge and the audiobook extract (and the accompanying graphics) were provided by Audiobookworm Promotions and are used with permission. Post dividers by Fun Stuff for Your Blog via Pure Imagination. Tweets embedded by codes provided by Twitter. Blog graphics created by Jorie via Canva: Audiobook Spotlight banner, Audio Extract graphic and the Comment Box Banner.}
Copyright © Jorie Loves A Story, 2020.
I’m a social reader | I tweet my reading life
#CrimeFicFridays Audiobook Series Spotlight | “Turn to Dust” (Book Nine: the Kay Hunter Detective series) by Rachel Amphlett, narrated by Alison Campbell https://t.co/KopGuVwBJd
— Jorie (#WyrdAndWonder) ??? (@joriestory) July 24, 2020
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