The Judas Murders
Whippoorwill Hollow, Book 3
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Narrated by:
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Joe Geoffrey
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By:
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Ken Oder
About this listen
On a cold February morning in 1967, Sheriff Coleman Grundy finds Betty Lou Mundy dead in her front yard and her husband on the porch with the gun that killed her. It looks like a classic case of revenge on a cheating wife.
Until the next murder. And the next. As Cole desperately searches for leads, he’s forced to come to grips with his own wife’s unsolved murder three years earlier, and in the process, he unearths long-buried secrets that change his life forever.
©2019 Ken Oder (P)2019 Ken OderWhat listeners say about The Judas Murders
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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- Mac
- 26-07-19
Brilliant
I really loved this book, I highly recommend this book. Great storyline and amazing characters.
❤️😍😍
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Overall
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Performance
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- Julie
- 18-07-19
A murder mystery with lots of twists
This is the first book by this author that I have listened to but I really enjoyed it and will be giving the rest of his books a go. It is a little misleading as it is in the Morden detective category but the book is set in 1967, you wouldn't actually know this if they didn't keep giving you the date at the beginning of each chapter, well maybe you would miss the use of mobile phones. What I am trying to say is even though it was set in the past the story wasn't slow or long winded, infact the body count kept rising like you would expect with a modern day mystery and a very cleverly woven plot, that I didn't see coming.
Sheriff Coleman thinks he has a very open and shut case when he is called out to find the body of Betty Lou. Everything points to her husband as the killer, especially when he turns a gun on himself. However evidence keeps turning up that convinces the Sheriff that more is going on than he first thought and as he looks deeper into the murder more bodies start turning up some not even thought to be murders and with someone taking shots at his deputies he and his team have no choice but to take a closer look even if it means digging up old secrets of betrayal, lies and hurt.
The narrator had a very deep voice that wasn't very good for doing female voices as I couldn't tell them apart but by the end of the story I had got use it.
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