Freed to Kill Audiobook By Gera-Lind Kolarik, Wayne Klatt cover art

Freed to Kill

The True Story of Larry Eyler

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An account of the murdering spree of Larry Eyler, who kidnapped, tortured, and killed at least 23 young men, describes how Eyler managed to evade capture for three years, his apprehension, and his release on a technicality.

©1990 Gera-Lind Kolarik w/ Wayne Klatt (P)2015 GeraLind Kolarik w/ Wayne Klatt
True Crime Murder Crime Biographies & Memoirs
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This certainly covered the whole story. There was a lot more to it. And I started mainly to see if he was convicted in Ohio murders.

Freed to kill review

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I thought the actual information was great and interesting and well researched, so no problems from a writing standpoint, but the narrator was all over the place. If it wasn't him choosing weird voices for people, it was weird quality changes constantly as if he recorded every other sentence in a different place with different tech. Very odd. I didn't hate his voice or anything, he was fine when he was just narrating and the sound was okay, but the other times were just really egregious.

Still, absolutely worth it for the content of the book.

Well written, questionably voiced

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What would have made Freed to Kill better?

A slower paced more conversational narration such as Kevin Pierce, this was so fast, I often had to go back and listen to remember people's names, go back and determine it was a transcript question answer in the middle of a chapter interrupting the flow

What was the most interesting aspect of this story? The least interesting?

I'm not sure, I didn't finish it. I bought the print version so I'll be able to read it on my own.

What didn’t you like about Joseph B. Kearns’s performance?

A slower paced more conversational narration such as Kevin Pierce, this was so fast, I often had to go back and listen to remember people's names, go back and determine it was a transcript question answer in the middle of a chapter interrupting the flow

Terrible Narration

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