Labyrinth Audiobook By A. G. Riddle cover art

Labyrinth

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Labyrinth

By: A. G. Riddle
Narrated by: James Babson
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From the bestselling author of Lost in Time and Quantum Radio comes a new mind-bending thriller: a group of strangers with tinnitus begins seeing numbers—numbers they soon realize are a code that will change the world.

Alan Norris has lost everything. Except for his daughter. And he's willing to do anything to protect her.

The day of his wife's funeral, as he's walking to give the eulogy, the ringing in his ears starts. His tinnitus began when he was in the Marines, the day a roadside bomb went off. Usually, it's a low whine—a tea kettle that never quite boils. But as his prosthetic and his good leg sink into the soggy grass, the ringing changes. That afternoon, the ringing only he can hear sounds like three jagged rocks dropped in a tin can and shaken.

When the rattling hits a crescendo, he sees a series of numbers: 12122518914208.

He assumes it's a stress reaction. A hallucination. He's wrong about that. And several other things.

The ringing and the numbers are a mystery, but the worst part is that when that unseen hand shakes the can, Alan begins to lose time.

A few minutes at first.

Then longer.

Until one night, he wakes up next to a dead body.

He could call the police. Or run. He doesn't do either. Because he doesn't know what happened to his daughter during the time he lost, leaving him no choice but to dig deeper.

Alan soon discovers he's not the only one seeing the numbers. And that the sequence is key to a conspiracy with far-reaching consequences. For him and the entire world.

©2025 A. G. Riddle (P)2025 Recorded Books
Genetic Engineering Hard Science Fiction Science Fiction Technothrillers Thriller & Suspense Exciting Fiction
Fascinating Premise • Thought-provoking Ideas • Fantastic Narrator • Relevant Technology Themes • Clever Plot Twists

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Overall I liked the book. Decent narrator, though he needs to work on a larger variety of character voices. Not bad, but it can be a bit flat or repetitive at times.

I've read other books by Riddle and this was a hesitant purchase. He always seems to have a great vision and he gets there in the end, but I think he really needs the help of a good editor to help streamline the story. There are large parts of the book that kinda drag because the story is giving way too much detail for inconsequential parts. Just like RR Martin talks about food too much, Riddle seems to get lost in minor details that don't really matter. Like when the CEO goes on at length when describing his Claire user story of Labyrinth. Really not needed. This happens in a few other places.

Overall I'm recommending the story as a buy. Just hope the narrator and author take the feedback under consideration.

Good story. Needs some tighter editing

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You really have to pay attention towards the middle because it starts using different timelines and a lot of metaphors but if you pay attention, it’s really good

Definitely interesting

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Twists turns and hopeful story of how AI can emerge and evolve in our world

Engaging, immersive AI story

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An amazing story. This book was easily the best audiobook I’ve listened to in 2025!

Excellent book and performance

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This book could have been shortened in half. Half the book felt like a hallmark movie. Finally towards the end it could be classified as Sci-Fi.

I do enjoy most of this authors books and will continue to look forward to them.

Definitely not A.G. Riddles best

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