West by God Audiolibro Por Tyler Bell arte de portada

West by God

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West by God

De: Tyler Bell
Narrado por: Tyler Bell
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Written and Narrated by Tyler Bell of the award winning podcast, The Westside Fairytales

West by God is the story of a young newspaper journalist named Adelaide sent to report on a high-profile murder in the remote (and fictional) town of Targrady, West Virginia. Once she gets there, she discovers the case in question is anything but open-and-shut, and quickly finds herself neck-deep in a mystery that could sink the entire town.

Complicating Adelaide's efforts to get to the bottom of the story are the machinations of a nightmare creature called the Witchum Woman, a local drug syndicate led by the enigmatic Fetid Queen and populated by white supremacists, and the age-old small town suspicion of outsiders.

"West by God" is an adult horror/thriller fiction novel that delves into themes of race, gender, sexuality and justice. It could be found on a shelf beside authors such as Dan Simmons and Davis Grubb.

©2023 The Henlo Press (P)2024 Tyler Bell
Horror Oculto Ficción

Lo que los oyentes dicen sobre West by God

Calificaciones medias de los clientes
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  • 4 out of 5 stars
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    3
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    4
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    1
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Ejecución
  • 4 out of 5 stars
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    6
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Historia
  • 4 out of 5 stars
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    3
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  • Total
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Ejecución
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Historia
    4 out of 5 stars

Fantastic Debut Novel

Reading like Gillian Flynn's "Sharp Objects," but retold by Neil Gaimen, "West by God " is a brilliant supernatural thriller with some weak points.

What I loved most about the book were the characters and their dialogue. My absolute favorite is Mercury, but the entire cast is strong and each feel like a lived character. Along with that I absolutely loved the supernatural elements and how they're worked into the story. The entire Fetid Queen section is exactly what I love in horror/thriller hybrids. Which flows into talking about the prose which tends to be very boiler plate in reality but when things start veering into horror the writing picks up the pace with some great tension writing and descriptive language.

However, the weakest aspect of the story is the core theme. There are numerous topics that Tyler Bell touches on but it never feels to go beyond touching on them. I finished the novel not very sure what had been said other than a compelling mystery. I think of a Chandler book where by the end it feels like every character and plot beat breathes the same concrete message, but I can't say the same with this story.

But given how strong the plot and characters are I can't say that's too big of an issue. You're still in for a great small town murder mystery with a lot to say, even if its a bit unfocused.

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  • Total
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Ejecución
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Historia
    4 out of 5 stars

Overall, not bad at all...

I came upon this novel expecting to be bored and to poke fun at sophomoric writing. I was pleasantly surprised that this book actually didn't suck and may have been worth Audible's one measley credit a month.

The book starts somewhat slow, and one might think it's a loose regurgitation of A Time to Kill through the eyes of a reporter. When I say the book starts slow, it isn't boring, per se, just not page turning until midway in, where the story racks up increasingly until the end.

The heroine, a bit of a white savior with a twist, is named Adelaide Stevenson, not to be confused with Adelei Stevenson, and the male author can perhaps be forgiven for certain tropes that give away that Adelaide is written as how a man would think women think.

When we first meet Adelaide, she is in the middle of being sick, comically in the men's bathroom, to ward off women asking if she's OK. When workmen come in, one asks her if she's OK, and Adelaide, fresh from emesis, wonders if he's handsome (eye roll).

Adelaide's Black adopted mother knows Adelaide is pregnant before she or a pregnancy test can confirm so, female magic or the glow of a woman bearing the fruit of connubial bliss, I cannot say.

Adelaide is afraid of nothing, rebuffing having a man around when doing a report out of town of a murder ( I think most women would be somewhat concerned for their safety, but whatever).


We are led to believe the murder of the young adult in this book is racially charged, a Black man raped, hanged, and sexually mutilated by white men. But no, the Whites have been framed in this predominantly Black town ( see, why I say she's a white savior with a twist?).

Why is the man murdered referred to as a woman as she is killed? Because she was a woman, a trans woman in the early 2000s, living in rural West Virginia. As the story progresses, the book becomes a DEI whodunnit, with a colorful cast of characters, a little bit of the supernatural, and moments I held my breath in suspense.

The book does seem at times a monument to White liberal virtue signaling, but overall, the elements of the book where sensitivity is needed are well-crafted. Apart from naming a majority Black town Targrady, that is.

The horrific death of Julie is not drawn out with excessive gore or length. The several Black trans characters in the story are all respected by the author, along with their pronouns. Even the poor White family of the accused murderers is written with nuance.

What I would say were the flaws in the novel is that the dream sequences were a bit too lengthy even though they come together in the end, and maybe ask a few women regarding female characters if this or that seems plausible.

Lastly, it's always great when one can hear an author read his work as it sounded to himself when he wrote it. Tyler Bell has a voice for audiobooks, doing the voices of his characters as he meant them to be.

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  • Total
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Ejecución
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Historia
    4 out of 5 stars

Simple story told well.

Solid horror, while being nostalgic, and modern. No sentence is useless or bloated. Straightforward, while playing on your preconceived notions of America and Americans. Would recommend to any horror fan.

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  • Total
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Ejecución
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Historia
    3 out of 5 stars

not the pod

I was expecting the kinda story from the pod. I got a lil of weird stuff but not the great stuff like the pod

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  • Total
    1 out of 5 stars
  • Ejecución
    1 out of 5 stars
  • Historia
    1 out of 5 stars

Don't Bother

I don't have words to adequately describe how disappointed I am in this story. The positive reviews must be paid ads or something. I got to the point where there were only 3 hours left in this story and STILL NOTHING HAD HAPPENED. It's literally just a novel about a woman going around town and listening to others opine about the details of a lynching that occurred before the action of the story began. It meanders on and on and never goes anywhere. With such little time left on the counter, I don't see how this story can be redeemed. This is an utter failure in story telling by Tyler Bell. I won't bother with anything else by this author. I'd give zero stars if I could.

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