Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Shadows

Rate this book
A healthy patient dies without explanation. A tour bus crashes; no survivors. Electrical fires. Strange diseases. Odd, deadly accidents.

And only a group of teens know why this is happening.

On an ordinary weekend, out on a drive at night, four friends find a portal to hell. And they accidentally release into the world am army of grim reapers with a hatred of all humankind that immediately embarks on a worldwide killing spree the likes of which has not been seen since the Black Plague. Or the Purple Plague before that.

Now, only Conner, Almira, Ricky, and Flower can save the world. So the friends must sacrifice themselves in order to bring order back to a broken planet, by going back through the portal....

Back into a world of screaming darkness....

Back to the dominion of death....

But hopefully back in time for dinner.

Audible Audio

First published July 9, 2014

37 people want to read

About the author

Carl S. Plumer

8 books34 followers
CARL S. PLUMER was born in New York City, holds advanced degrees in writing, and has spent his life surrounded by words. He's delivered newspapers, worked at a printing press, managed a bookstore, taught writing, wrote for literary magazines, published technical and fiction books, and has always considered himself a writer. He is an Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award Quarterfinalist and a National Indie Excellence Award Finalist, as well as a judge for the World's Best Story award.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
5 (29%)
4 stars
3 (17%)
3 stars
4 (23%)
2 stars
4 (23%)
1 star
1 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Sarah .
439 reviews82 followers
did-not-finish
February 26, 2016
Couldn't finish this audiobook, unfortunately. It just could not keep my interest so I moved on to something that could.
Profile Image for Faith.
82 reviews7 followers
May 1, 2018
Exactly what I want when reading fiction. This is easy to read, immersive and a thoroughly enjoyable experience. The characters are easy to like and while the story is more of a young adult level, the larger themes explored of death and our emotions about it are complex and thought provoking.
Profile Image for Dana.
51 reviews
February 24, 2019
I found nothing humorous about this book, the characters were flat, and it sorely needed editing. There were also inconsistencies in the story line...

Example 1: Flower is all but dead: broken, having needed surgery, and lying in a coma, then suddenly she’s getting out of bed and walking around like nothing happened?

Example 2: Parents dead at end of chapter twenty, then alive beginning of twenty one. Chapter twenty two the angel of death says she will bring parents back.

Definitely not a satisfying read.

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
300 reviews4 followers
September 11, 2015
"Satire is a genre of literature, and sometimes graphic and performing arts, in which vices, follies, abuses, and shortcomings are held up to ridicule, ideally with the intent of shaming individuals, corporations, government or society itself, into improvement."

I only include this dictionary meaning of "Satire" in the review on the off chance the author reads the review. Because it is clear that no one has actually explained to him what satire is, despite his penchant for having 'a satire' written across the covers of his books. There is no satire here.

Beyond that the story is a mess.

It also doesn't flow. One example is midway through a speech where one of the teens explain how they escaped from the hell portal Plumer inserts a paragraph about how in the coming few days deaths all over the world would increase tenfold and no reason could be attributed to it. It then returns to the character continuing to speak. It's like the author accidentally copied and pasted a paragraph in the wrong location [There is the possibility that this as a footnote inserted into this section but a) the inserted paragraph had nothing to do with what he was saying at the time, and b) there is nothing that makes it seem like it was a footnote - which I guess would be the narrators fault not the authors].

There is also one character named "Ricky Martin" and about half the time the character is mentioned the full name is said (which is a lot of times). No other character gets this treatment. In fact half of them I have no idea if they were even given last names. But Ricky? The author won't let you ever forget his last name. Do you ever constantly call your friend by their full name? Because most of Ricky's friends do. But never once is it questioned or explained that it's an 'inside joke' or something. It's not evenly applied, in that characters swap back and forth from full name to first name. If it was an inside joke by his friends they would apply in consistently (like Young Neil or Stephen Stiles in Scott Pilgrim) It's like Plumer was so impressed with himself for making a joke about the famous singer that he couldn't possibly let you forget.

And then we get to the ending which is an anti-climax followed by a giant deus ex machina. And one in which I don’t think the main characters actually played a part at all, they just happened to be there for. It would have ended pretty much the same way no matter what the main characters had done. In fact the whole ending is like a giant ball of cotton candy sickliness, made all the worse because it is following what is supposed to be a dark book.

One good point I can think of - Plumer can turn a phrase. Individual lines read really well. It's just a shame he can't group them together into something coherent.

---------

Narration is 3.5 / 5

I enjoyed Ann Richardson's narration. She imparts emotion into the reading, making each character distinct. She gets, and is able to convey, some of the snarky teenage mood.

I'm not completely sure she got the book at times though. In a few places I noticed lines from the narrator that should have been conveyed with very dry wit, but they were read straight by her. I think she missed the dry joke that. There is the aforementioned possible footnote issue too.

In the end I would gladly listen to other books narrated by her, I think she is a good narrator, I just don’t think this is the book for her.


---------------

This audiobook was provided by the author, narrator, or publisher at no cost in exchange for an unbiased review courtesy of audiobookblast dot com.
Profile Image for Bookwyrm Speaks.
303 reviews20 followers
January 11, 2016
Shadows of Death deals with death; that is, the actual manifestations of death, the shadows that do the sould collecting. Well, it seems they dont like us, and when they get a chance, break out of limbo and kill lots of people. Can anyone say The Black Death? Yep, one of their shows. This story deals with an outbreak of Deaths, accidentally caused by four teen friends, and their efforts to stop the wordwide Deaths spree, and put the genie back in the bottle, so to speak. It has some dark elements, and a lot of humor to offset it. The four main characters are engaging and well written, with realistic interactions and reactions to the crisis. The supporting characters are well written as well, and help flesh out the story. The plot is fast paced, with a lot of action and interesting Deaths, since they can be creative. Ann Richardson does a great job of narrating, really moving the story along, and making each character stand out.

I was given a review copy of this book by the publisher, author or narrator free of charge in return for an honest review through Audiobookblast dot com.
Profile Image for Delta.
1,242 reviews22 followers
September 14, 2015
I had a really had time taking this book seriously. Plumer was obviously trying to create a story about the end times with a group of heroic teenagers, but all you really get is a story about a lot of people dying, clueless teenagers fumbling around the city, and a deus ex machina that fixes everything so the teenagers don't have to. I would have given more stars if I didn't spend most of the book in a near-DNF rage over the complete inaccuracies of the scenes involving the law enforcement officers. The awkward insertions of worldly events was distracting and irritating.

I listened to the audio version and I felt Ann M. Richardson did a pretty decent job of narrating. She's the only reason this book didn't get one-star from me. She did an excellent job conveying the befuddlement of the teenagers, but I think the "humor" was harder to get across. Also, she could have upped her reading speed a bit.

**I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.**
Profile Image for Deedra.
3,932 reviews40 followers
December 6, 2015
This was a really great read!Narrator Ann M. Richardson takes us thru the chaos nicely.People are dying,for no apparent reason.Well,some die of known causes...like cancer sneaking up and killing you on the spot,things like that.It is fun yet terrifying! It seems that a few teenagers have accidently released something from hell...can they put it back?Let us all hope!
"I was provided this audiobook at no charge by the author, publisher and/or narrator in exchange for an unbiased review via AudiobookBlast or MalarHouse
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.