Brimming with Gothic charm, Larry Brent’s first audiobook adventure is a nostalgic reminder that as good as dramatic adaptations can be, an author’s original text has a charm all its own.
Just in time for Thanksgiving, when maybe your inlaws have a few more, ah, multi-personalities than you’d like them to have, comes the classic tale of the two halves of the human experience, The Confessions of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. This fine story marks the first tale by the Willamette Radio Workshop to grace Radio Drama Revival, though we’ve heard from their compatriots such as Joe Medina’s Afterhell and Dry Smoke and Whispers with Mark Rose and Gerall McQuinn. Today we learn about the two sides warring in the brilliant and troubled Dr. Jekyll — the desire to explore unknown reaches of science, and the uncontrollable urges of the being repressed within.
Terror Stalks the airwaves! On Halloween we heard three tales of horror guaranteed to haunt your dreams “Forevermore.” We kick off a killer fright-night with William Dufris‘ adaptation of “The Statement of Randolph Carter” by H.P. Lovecraft, followed by the Grist Mill production of Joe R. Lansdale’s “God of the Razor,” and conclude with a scathing double feature from FinalRune Productions with the debut of “Dark Passenger” and the replay of “The Blind Man’s Confession,” two tales written and produced by yours truly, to make you fear all things that go bump in the night… Turn out your lights, hide under the blankets, and prepare to get spooked!