The Darkrock Audiobook By Wisteria D. Jones cover art

The Darkrock

The Darkrock Series

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The Darkrock

By: Wisteria D. Jones
Narrated by: Wayne Keller III
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About this listen

Mandy, Serena, Tina, Dan, Matt, and Jordon are about to find out why they’ve been summoned to the Hayback Woods with mysterious invitations.

Six students from Almward High School have been invited to touch the Darkrock: a strange rock no one has ever heard of before. Not knowing whether the invitation is a blessing or a curse, the teenagers decide to test the waters and find out just what their own desires may be. Little do they know that they’re about to get a lot more than they bargained for.

The Lustful Vixen, The Envious Wallflower, The Gluttonous Raver, The Wrathful Pushover, The Greedy Jock, The Slothful Dreamer, and The Prideful Puppet Master have come together for one complete work in this series bundle. Enjoy the series in its entirety in one place! How exactly will six average teens react when they come into contact with something that cannot be explained? Listen, if you dare...

©2017 Wisteria D. Jones (P)2019 Wisteria D. Jones
Anthologies & Short Stories Fantasy Fiction Short Stories Young Adult
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What listeners say about The Darkrock

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

Creative and interesting

The Darkrock is one of the most creative books I have listened to in a long time. This fast paced book is well written and very descriptive. The narrator Wayne Keller III did an amazing job bringing the story to life. The characters are quirky, and most of the time typical teenagers. I highly recommend this book. I received this audio book at my request and I am voluntarily leaving my honest review of my own volition.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

A fun listen

an interesting story with a fun twist! i loved all the characters and loved how the story gave each character their own individual tale as a way to give full perspective to the story as a whole. the last story was unexpected and definitely an unexpected twist! i would recommend this book!

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

hope this was an introduction or something

first let me start by saying I was given this book free of charge in exchange for an honest review, that said I'm free to review it as I like look up the book Rouge if you doubt that the book was awful and my review reflected my thoughts. now the book does have some great emotional moment's with a few funny in-between and definitely the writer knows psychology, the characters are interesting and I can see where this could be a good book. but I'm lost on the point. however maybe I need to look at the series and see if that given any more information. if I can understand the world this book is written in it would probably be good. but as a stand alone book it was just alright and a decent way to kill a few hours.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Weird and Yet Awesome

This books started out really odd, and as I kept listening it proceeded to get better and better! Highly recommend!

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    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

disappointing

I have to say I was disappointed in this book. The first 6 parts of it were fine; the story is of six teenagers basically coming to realize something about themselves. They are all given a strange letter that they would get their hearts desire if they go out into the woods and touched the Dark Rock. All 6 gather, each one touches the rock and wander off into the woods.

What disappointed me was the last part of the book, the denouement. Having listened to three other of Wisteria P. Jones books I knew of the supernatural/paranormal/otherworldly twist. But I felt that this was a cop-out; as if the author didn't know how to logically explain what was going on. I was okay with the Wizard of Oz crystal ball type of observation of the teenagers, but the whole last part of the book was just confusing and didn't really give us a conclusion, like her other books. I would have preferred the teenagers met up with their overseer and spoke of the changes they were planning on making to their lives, or what they learned, but there was no real closure of the book.

I'm not sure if I liked the narrator or not. He definitely fit the tone of the book - a young narrator who sounded like a teenager himself, and he did try to individualize the characters - some voices worked better than others. Of course, the difficulty with narrators is that you seldom actually know if you are hearing their natural voice or if they are in the character of the book from start to finish. (For example, an American speaking with an English accent throughout a body of work, or vice versa. Just think of Spike from Buffy!) 

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