Still catching up on audiobook reviews, here are two more, one of which is getting quite a bit of attention. (Links on individual covers are to Amazon.)
LloydMcNeil’s Last Ride: A Novel by Will Leitch
Editors’ pick Best Books of the Year So Far 2025
Soon to be a major motion picture.
HarperAudio
May 20, 2025
Narrator: Chris Andrew Ciulla
Four Stars 
Police officer Lloyd McNeil has been given a death sentence. Not by his job. And in no way could he have expected.
The big problem is that McNeil has a son, if there can be a bigger problem than dying young. And that problem is a young, dependent son.
I don’t remember specifically if the main character actually went through the five stages of grief (denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance). What pulled me in was the prognosis, what kept me reading was how he was going to solve the problem of taking care of his son after his death. Given the time frame, he didn’t have a lot of time to solve that and seemed more like he went from denial straight to acceptance.
The novel becomes a final, loving, teaching, philosophical tome to his son. The narrative is infused with a sense of humor, which I appreciated, as there were also times when the philosophical pages became a bit long and heavy, points repeated with slightly different wording that slowed the pace.
McNeil hatches a plan that goes awry more often than not. It’s a heavy character-driven story that takes a unique circumstance and tries to instill the depth of emotion the plot would demand. Well written, although I was a bit underwhelmed with the ending.
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Our Last Wild Days: A Novel by Anna Bailey
Simon & Schuster Audio
May 20, 2025
Narrator: Kate Handford
Three Stars 
I’m one of those readers who enjoys stories of Louisiana, usually colorful and colloquial.
I thought it might be atmospheric. And it was. Just not the way I expected.
Loyal Mae returned to Jackknife for her mother who is rapidly declining. She finds an ally in Sasha, another journalist. When Loyal’s childhood friend is discovered dead in a bayou, she becomes embroiled in getting to the truth of her death. Cutter had two brothers, neither of whom was particularly crushed by the loss of their sister.
It’s a slow burn of a plot and then turns dark, nasty even, getting into topics I’d never have considered had I known they were all included. These are often graphic depictions, one of which I’d never heard of that almost turned my stomach.
This might be the darkest that mankind can hand out. Perhaps we haven’t left barbarism behind us after all.
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Many thanks to my local library for providing me with the opportunity to listen to these books. Any opinion expressed here is my own.
©2025 V Williams



oops. yeah, sorry. of course i had the audiobook of it, i don’t know if there’d be a big difference over reading it–skip more through the ucky stuff? just too…too much for me.
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Both great reviews, Virginia, for very different books. I am a bit worried about Our Last Wild Days as I do have an overdue ARC of that one to read and review.
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