9780062824646
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Cemetery Road audiobook

  • By: Greg Iles
  • Narrator: Scott Brick
  • Category: Crime, Fiction, Thrillers
  • Length: 23 hours 43 minutes
  • Publisher: HarperAudio
  • Publish date: March 05, 2019
  • Language: English
  • (12163 ratings)
(12163 ratings)
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Cemetery Road Audiobook Summary

The #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Natchez Burning trilogy returns with an electrifying tale of friendship, betrayal, and shattering secrets that threaten to destroy a small Mississippi town.

When Marshall McEwan left his hometown at age eighteen, he vowed never to return. The trauma that drove him away ultimately spurred him to become one of the most successful journalists in Washington D.C. But just as the political chaos in the nation’s capital lifts him to new heights, Marshall is forced to return home in spite of his boyhood vow.

His father is dying, his mother is struggling to keep the family newspaper from failing, and the town is in the midst of an economic rebirth that might be built upon crimes that reach into the state capitol–and perhaps even to Washington. More disturbing still, Marshall’s high school sweetheart, Jet, has married into the family of Max Matheson, patriarch of one of the families that rule Bienville through a shadow organization called the Bienville Poker Club.

When archeologist Buck McKibben is murdered at a construction site, Bienville is thrown into chaos. The ensuing homicide investigation is soon derailed by a second crime that rocks the community to its core. Power broker Max Matheson’s wife has been shot dead in her own bed, and the only other person in it at the time was her husband, Max. Stranger still, Max demands that his daughter-on-law, Jet, defend him in court.

As a journalist, Marshall knows all too well how the corrosive power of money and politics can sabotage investigations. Without telling a soul, he joins forces with Jet, who has lived for fifteen years at the heart of Max Matheson’s family, and begins digging into both murders. With Jet walking the dangerous road of an inside informer, they soon uncover a web of criminal schemes that undergird the town’s recent success. But these crimes pale in comparison to the secret at the heart of the Matheson family. When those who have remained silent for years dare to speak to Marshall, pressure begins to build like water against a crumbling dam.

Marshall loses friends, family members, and finally even Jet, for no one in Bienville seems willing to endure the reckoning that the Poker Club has long deserved. And by the time Marshall grasps the long-buried truth, he would give almost anything not to have to face it.

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Cemetery Road Audiobook Narrator

Scott Brick is the narrator of Cemetery Road audiobook that was written by Greg Iles

Greg Iles spent most of his youth in Natchez, Mississippi. His first novel, Spandau Phoenix, was the first of thirteen New York Times bestsellers, and his new trilogy continues the story of Penn Cage, protagonist of The Quiet Game, Turning Angel, and #1 New York Times bestseller The Devil’s Punchbowl. Iles’s novels have been made into films and published in more than thirty-five countries. He lives in Natchez with his wife and has two children.

About the Author(s) of Cemetery Road

Greg Iles is the author of Cemetery Road

Cemetery Road Full Details

Narrator Scott Brick
Length 23 hours 43 minutes
Author Greg Iles
Category
Publisher HarperAudio
Release date March 05, 2019
ISBN 9780062824646

Subjects

The publisher of the Cemetery Road is HarperAudio. includes the following subjects: The BISAC Subject Code is Crime, Fiction, Thrillers

Additional info

The publisher of the Cemetery Road is HarperAudio. The imprint is HarperAudio. It is supplied by HarperAudio. The ISBN-13 is 9780062824646.

Global Availability

This book is only available in the United States.

Goodreads Reviews

Nilufer

August 07, 2020

Different, complex, twisting story, a perfect combination of a family drama and real events on Florida mystery! An absorbing crime story,grief, betrayal in Southern community!

Julie

June 02, 2019

Cemetery Road by Greg Iles is a 2019 William Morrow publication. Small town corruption, family tragedies, betrayals, and murder- In other words- quintessential Greg Iles. In this standalone novel, award winning journalist, Marshall McEwan, returns home to Bienville, Mississippi to be closer to his parents after his estranged father is diagnosed with Parkinson’s. At least that’s what he tells himself. Deep in his heart, however, he acknowledges an ulterior motive- reuniting with his first love- a woman named Jet, who just happens to be married to his best friend. But when Buck Ferris, a man who had a strong influence on Marshall, is found dead, Marshall is convinced foul play is at hand. But who would want to kill Buck and why? Well, Buck may have made a discovery that could derail the proposed installation of a paper mill, which would breathe new life into the slowly dying town of Bienville. A lot is at stake, and the town’s powerful ‘Poker Club’ will make sure the Chinese investors aren’t scared off, which means Buck might have been collateral damage. As Marshall digs deeper into the circumstances of Buck’s death, the Poker Club members do what they do best- make threats, intimidate, bully, and blackmail, and maybe even murder, anyone who stands in their way- and Marshall and all his dark secrets is in their crosshairs. Cemetery Road is not just a suspenseful thriller, with all its many twists and turns, and layers of deceptions. It is also a stellar piece of southern fiction, with Gothic elements that only the south can lay claim to. The characters are flawed- every single one of them- some more than others, and Marshall, no saint himself, is forced to stare his demons in the face, to make eye contact with them, as everything he thought he knew wavers and fades like a mirage in the desert. Under scrutiny is the moral compromises made in the name of capitalism, the mythology of our youth, the hope of recapturing a lost opportunity, while trying to do what is right for all concerned. For Marshall, it is more personal, perhaps, as he is also coping with deeply embedded grief and carrying a heavy burden of guilt bestowed upon him by his embittered father. However, he is also trying to save his father's newspaper, cover his own butt, and protect the women he loves. I often found myself on the edge of my seat, as Marshall survives one major event after another by the seat of his pants, and as the shock waves reverberate relentlessly. It was hard to put the book down for any length of time. At the end of the day, Iles proves, yet again, his intimate knowledge of the old southern realities, still prevalent and still thriving. But, at the end of the day, his characters, though bruised and bleeding, may finally shake off the ghosts of the past, each in his or her own way, while southern style justice continues to work in the most mysterious of ways.

Joey

April 18, 2019

4.5 Stars —This is the 10th book by Greg Iles I have read. Needless to say, if he wasn’t one of the best storytellers around, I wouldn’t have read 10 of his 16 novels. “Cemetery Road” is a stand alone book which doesn’t star Penn Cage, Iles’ most famous and well liked protagonists. It also doesn’t include one courtroom scene, which makes it different from most of Iles’ other books. However, despite these differences, this book does not disappoint. “Cemetery Road” tells its story through the eyes of Marshall McEwan, the publisher of a local newspaper. The book begins with McEwan’s good friend being murdered and McEwan taking a personal interest in attempting to solve the case. He is met with strong opposition from a group of community power brokers nicknamed “”The Poker Club” that basically run the town and everyone in it. The Poker Club has a special interest in this case and in keeping it unsolved (as it could disrupt a huge Chinese manufacturing plant from building and operating in the city, which would cost The Poker Club millions in profits). This combined with the storyline of turmoil in Marshall’s personal life (the result of him having an affair with a good friend’s wife) form the plot of this 608 page novel. As always, Iles does a great job of keeping the plot moving with so many twists and turns, I can’t remember them all. What makes Iles stand out among current authors, is that he writes long, character driven stories that are very well written, interesting and realistic. This book is no exception and was great from start to finish. It did not suffer from long, boring sections or chapters that many long books suffer. The critiques I have of this book mirror my critiques of Iles’ other books:1) too much unnecessary cursing by all of the characters; 2)it spends an inordinate amount of time condemning and ridiculing Christianity; 3) most of the his characters are stereotypes—either white, old-south, racist powerbrokers (think Boss Hogg) or uneducated black persons who are very hard workers at menial jobs and who are of the highest character. After 10 books, Iles needs to move on from his profanity and religious hang ups and expand his character base to include different new-South type characters. But great job on this one, and I hope to see Marshall McEwan in future Iles’ novels.

Tammy

March 10, 2019

This is your usual Iles. A crusading and prize winning journalist returns to his small town Mississippi home to a less than functional family and barely functioning family newspaper. There is a murder which provides the impetus for the narrative. A cabal controls this town and nice men they are not. They are plenty of lies, deceit, betrayal and backstabbing. As I said, your usual Iles which is always entertaining.

Susanne

May 07, 2019

4 Stars.Complex, Twisty, Dark and Gritty. “Cemetery Road” is a standalone novel by Greg Iles. It is a brilliant character driven novel about family, friendship, love and politics in a small Mississippi town. Marshall McEwan is a reporter who returns to Bienville after a long absence. His father is ill and he has been tasked with taking over his dad’s ailing newspaper, The Watchman. Returning to Bienville is something he thought he’d never do - it holds too many bad memories for Marshall - the loss of his brother Adam, the breakdown of his relationship with his father and losing the love of his life Jet, to his former best friend Paul. Marshall’s life has been full of one tragedy after another and upon his return to Bienville, it happens again. Buck Ferris, a man who was like a father to Marshall is murdered and Marshall sets out to prove it, even though Buck’s death is made to look like an accident. It spells bad news for Marshall - as the most powerful men in Bienville known as “The Poker Club” will do whatever it takes to stop him from spilling their secrets. Turns out of course, that Marshall has a few secrets of his own, secrets that could hurt a lot of people, including his friends, his family and the love of his life and her husband. What a brilliantly done, heart-pounding saga! What Greg Iles does best is his characterizations! He draws you into the lives of his characters and makes you care as if your own life depended on it. I was so invested in Marshall’s life while reading this novel, that I was cussing and stomping my feet! Jet?!?! I mean, really? Really?!? I detested her. With every fiber of my being!! I wanted to shake Marshall and tell him to wake up and smell the coffee (which, of course, he loved (so ok, he might be a smart boy after all, hee hee))! That said, all I will say is that when he loves, his friends..etc.,. his family, he loves fiercely. There was never a moment in this novel where I lost interest in the storyline (even though the book is over 600 pages), I was fully invested from the first to the last. I must provide a disclaimer that there are a few parts of this story that are a bit depressing thus please be aware of that before you start reading. This novel also contains a few racy scenes for those of you who might feel the need to cover your eyes. In case it hasn’t been made obvious throughout the years, Greg Iles is one of my favorite authors: I adore his writing style, his characterizations and the depths his characters go to, to get what they need and want. I eagerly await the next book hitting the shelves and this novel was no different! Admittedly, Penn Cage (from Greg Iles’ serial novels) is my favorite Iles’ character and I missed him something awful in this novel and I hope to see him again sometime soon. (Hint, hint!)Thank you to Edelweiss, Harper Collins - William Morrow and Greg Iles for an arc of this novel in exchange for an honest review. Published on Edelweiss, Goodreads and Amazon on 5.7.19.

Jonathan

July 23, 2019

Having read 4 of Greg's books, "The Footprints of God" was the only one that lacked a family-driven theme. Brilliant at building momentum, adding plot twists when least expected, his storytelling is masterful. Opening with the murder of Buck Ferris, an old friend, the reader is immersed into the world of Marshall McEwan, a Pulitzer prize winning writer and journalist. Greg inserts the Poker Club as primary suspect, a group of high rolling, political manipulators about to cash in on a deal cut with the Chinese. Corruption abounds with innumerable parallels drawn to the Trump administration; Max Matheson is father of Marshall's best friend, Paul, and like Trump leads the Poker Club like a mafia don. Evil to a fault, he manipulates not only his son and family, but all those around him. Fast paced, twists and turns abound, the story is one worth reading for those that like page turners, and even for those who don't. Highly recommended.

Lisa

March 05, 2019

A first rate journey into a small town’s corrupt power brokers and the length they will go to protect their pockets. SUMMARYMarshall McEwan vowed never to return to his hometown, Beinville Mississippi when he left at age eighteen. He moved to Washington D.C. and became an extremely successful and award-winning journalist. But now his father is now dying and his mother needs Marshall to help with the debt-ridden family newspaper, The Watchman. Soon after Marshall’s return to Beinville, his boyhood mentor, Buck Ferris is found murdered at a soon-to-be construction site. The site is that of a new paper mill, a billion dollar economic investment by a group of Chinese investors, in a town on the brink of economic death. Buck had been looking for some 4,000 year old artifacts he believed to be at the site. Bienville is thrown into chaos with the threat of historic artifacts on the site, which would kill the deal. Marshall will stop at nothing to find Buck’s killer. His investigation brings him into conflict with the Poker Club, a corrupt group of Beinville’s power brokers, who will not let anyone stand in their way of lining their pockets. Marshall’s high school sweetheart from over twenty years ago, Jet, still lives in Beinville and has married into the family of Max Matheson, patriarch of one of the families that rule the Poker Club. Paul Matheson, Max’s son, and Marshall’s best friend growing up, is now married to Jet. Paul, a Special Forces veteran, had saved Marshall’s life in Iraq and is now suffering from PTSD. Marshall and Paul’s relationship is complicated. Marshall adds to the complication when he renews a passionate affair with Jet that is bound to have major consequences. Marshall is also suffering from several of his own issues. When they were teenagers, Marshall’s older brother Adam, a Bienville’s star athlete drowned while trying to swim across the Mississippi River on a night of reckless teenage cockiness, for which Marshall has always blamed himself. It is the reason he left Beinville immediately after high school. His father has always blamed Marshall for Adam’s death as well. Marshall’s return to Beinville was an opportunity for redemption and forgiveness. REVIEWMurder, corruption, secrets and complicated personal relationships form the elements of this epic tale of a town and it’s people struggling with economic viability. The story is suspenseful and intense and the bad guys are beyond bad. The writing is descriptive and evocative. I found myself totally caught up in the deceptions, greed, infidelities and grief of this small town drama, as well as Marshall’s efforts to do the right thing. The characters are well-drawn and richly flawed. CEMETERY ROAD is a first rate journey into a small town’s powerfully rich and greedy who will do and say anything necessary to protect their pockets. GREG Iles has created a perfect blend of characters, setting and story. This was my first Greg Iles novel, and I am so glad I had the opportunity to read it. He had me with the first lyrical paragraph of the book. “I never meant to kill my brother. I never set out hate my father. I never dreamed I would bury my own son. Nor could I have imagined that I would betray the childhood friend who save my life, or win a Pulitzer Prize for telling a lie.” And it just gets better from there. My favorite part was exploring Marshall’s emotionally wrenching relationship with his father. While the book was lengthy, I thoroughly enjoyed every single one of the 590 pages. Greg Iles lives in Natchez Mississippi and has written twelve bestselling novels, several of which have been made into films. Thanks to LibraryThing, William Morrow and Greg Iles for an advance reading copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. Publisher William MorrowPublished March 5, 2019Review www.bluestockingreviews.com

Zoe

March 02, 2019

Ominous, pacey, and tragic!Cemetery Road is a gritty, engrossing novel about life in Bienville, Mississippi, a small town struggling with socioeconomic depression, corruption, murder, scheming politicians, and powerful, rich, white businessmen with no scruples.The prose is descriptive and tight. The characters are tormented, scarred, and complex. And the plot is a rollercoaster ride of twists, turns, deception, allegiances, revelations, greed, power, violence, infidelity, integrity, heartbreak, and grief.Overall, I would have to say that Cemetery Road is a dark, meticulous, deliciously suspenseful thriller that’s classic Iles with its journalistic backdrop, long-buried secrets, southern mentality, and complicated familial dynamics.Thank you to HarperCollins Canada for providing me with a copy in exchange for an honest review.

Carolyn

March 12, 2019

Greg Illes writes thrilling, complex stories set in the deep south of the United States. There are lovely antebellum mansions surrounded by fragrant flower gardens, but he explores the rotten core of these towns, which may contain corruption, murder, racism and injustice. This is a long book of 608 pages, but his compelling previous Natchez Burning trilogy contained 804, 814 and 707 pages without unnecessary filler, and I felt they could have gripped my attention even longer. In Cemetery Road, the protagonist and narrator, Marshall McEwan arrives home to Bienville, Mississippi. He left home at age 18 and vowed never to return. The reason was apparent hate and blame on the part of his estranged father. Now his father is dying and a newspaper run by the family for 150 years is on the brink of failure. Marshall has a renowned journalist in Washington, D.C. He has risen to the top of his field both as a reporter and TV commentator. In a stunning opening, Marshall describes the type of person he considers himself: “ I never meant to kill my brother. I never set out to hate my father. I never dreamed I would bury my own son. Nor could I have imagined I would betray my childhood friend who saved my life or win a Pulitzer Prize for telling a lie. All these things I have done, but most people I know would call me an honourable man.....I try to be a good man, and most of the time, I believe I succeed.”This introspective self-image may be shattered during a series of events which take place in less than a week. This is a story which explores themes of friendship, betrayal, forbidden sexual liaisons, grief, shame, corruption, murder, evil, greed and injustice in this small southern town. Bienville is on the verge of economic prosperity, unlike nearby towns and cities which are in decline. The town is ruled by a group of extremely wealthy and ruthless old white men, called the Poker Club. They have secured the town’s future by obtaining a billion-dollar Chinese paper mill, and the clearing of the land site for the new development is underway. Shortly after his return home, Marshall’s former father figure, scoutmaster, and archaeologist, has been murdered while digging on the construction site for the new paper mill. Marshall vows to bring the killer to justice which brings into conflict with the powerful Poker Club. He discovers how wealth and political interference can undermine justice. To complicate his personal life is his childhood love Jet, who is a lawyer and has married into the family of Max Matheson. Her husband, Paul, was Marshall’s good friend from school days and while in Special Forces saved Marshall’s life when on assignment in Iraq. The marriage is shaky, as her husband suffers from PTSD, and is drinking and over medicating. They have a son. Max, the father-in-law is one of the leading patriarchs in the Poker Club. Jet and Marshall begin a passionate and dangerous affair, meeting in secret. Max’s wife is shot to death while in bed with Max. They were the only two people in the home. Was it murder or suicide? Weighing heavily on Marshall’s mind as he uncovers some truths about the murders and the underlying corruption pervading all levels of the town, is how much to publish. Does he put his own life, the lives of his loved ones in jeopardy, and must he sacrifice his integrity to expose the truth? To do so, may destroy the new factory along with impending jobs and related infrastructure. Recommended. An enthralling, twisted, complicated thriller, with an easy to follow plot. The characters are well developed, some sympathetic but flawed, and some who personify evil. 4.5 stars

Skip

April 27, 2019

Like his Penn Cage series, this is classic Greg Iles: the main character is a writer, it is set in a small Southern city (Bienville), with a plot combining long-buried secrets, southern culture, complicated family dynamics, and nasty politics. Bienville is struggling with socioeconomic depression, corruption, murder, scheming politicians, and powerful, rich, white businessmen with no scruples (the Poker Club.)Winner of a Pulitzer Prize for a war story, Marshall McEwen returns to Bienville to help his mother with his ailing father, who owns the local newspaper. Marshall is living dangerously though, sleeping with Jet, the wife of a boyhood rival, a former black ops contractor, and son of a town scion. Terrible (depressing) things have happened to both Marshall and Jet in the past, damaging both of them. Things really collapsing when the murder of Marshall's mentor threatens the construction of a Chinese manufacturing facility. The Poker Club and Marshall spend much of the book making and breaking arrangements to allow the deal to proceed based on reparations.Once I got over the really depressing stuff, I enjoyed the story more, but the accelerating violence and number of dead bodies was a little extreme. Iles remains a favorite of mine.

Natalie

August 28, 2020

A 600-page tome! A male-centric read that was very much the traditional action/adventure genre.Marshall McEwan returns to run the family newspaper in Bienville, Mississippi. Early in the story, childhood mentor Buck McKibben is murdered and the adventures go from there.Throw in Marshall’s teenage sweetheart, Jet, and the complications are a plenty. Jet, of course, has married into the powerful Mathieson family, with FIL Max chairing the Bienville Poker Club (who are up to all sorts of skullduggery).If you tick all these boxes: ab epically long read filled with adventure , misadventure, crime, discrimination, conspiracy, dysfunction, secrets, with an overlay of Southern charm, this is the big read for you!

Jim

March 29, 2019

This book is about a man who has returned back home to the South because his father is dying. While being back home, his mentor is killed because he believes a new construction site use to be a Native American dwelling and this discovery would put a halt to the construction.Greg Iles is one of the few authors that I make sure I read the newly released book right away. Other authors I can wait until I come around to it. The author has an amazing gift of weaving so many concepts together into one book and that is the case with this offering. In this one we explore unexpected loss of loved ones, political graft, love triangles, and a major conspiracy. All of these are put together without missing a beat. Even with all these concepts that isn't even the main concept of exploration in this book. That would be the choices we make whether we are forced into them or not and how we live with their consequences. These consequences could lead into heartache and pain and that is the result we have to bear. The reason I could not give this five stars is that this book did remind me of the Penn Cage series that this author has written. That series has recently ended so this coincidence seemed a little too convenient. The other reason is the characters including our "hero" of the story. Besides a side character of Nadine, I did not like any of them. This was the result of their choices which is a selling point of this novel. Choices whether forced or not don't always make the person shine in a positive light.Once again Greg Iles has written a terrific thriller that has so much than just action and thrill. He has the ability to capture the reader quickly and not let go for the whole ride and this book accomplishes that. I kept on wondering what would happen next as the twists and turns came out of nowhere and there was no way I could predict them.

Erin

April 24, 2019

This review is for the audio version of “Cemetery Road”, by Greg Illes, narrated by Scott Brick and published by HarperAudio. Audio: 4 stars Scott Brick is a renowned narrator, with too many novels under his belt to mention, however he was recognizable to me because of his work in Michael Crichton’s Dragon Teeth. Brick has a distinctly recognizable voice, built up from many years of acting and narrating, that is both clear and expressive. He narrates the entire novel (quite a WHOPPER, too) , and although this novel is primarily told from one perspective, Mr. Brick also makes the transition into a few other voice characters as well, most of them Southern, and three of them female. He was a good fit for this novel although I found that he kept the same voice tone and intonation for all of the characters, which made differentiation difficult in some situations. Overall, the strong and experienced voice narration of Mr. Brick adds the right amount of Southern charm to this novel. Story: 4 stars Greg Illes is the author of the Natchez Burning (or Penn Cage) series, the Southern stories that are part family drama, part crime, part who-dunnit. And this novel is no different. Marshall McEwan is now a successful reporter in Washington, D.C, a place he ended up years ago when he left his hick hometown behind him for good. Now, he must return to the town he left behind, Bienville, Mississippi, to help his estranged, yet ailing, father. Back in Bienville, Marshall becomes quickly immersed in the recent drama surrounding the local “Bienville Poker Club”, a group of highly manipulative and stupidly wealthy old men who have played a part in controlling most of the city’s inner workings for many years. When Marshall’s long time mentor and friend turns up dead, and the Bienville club seems to be at the centre, Marshall puts his life and his career on the line trying to unmask the most powerful men in all of Bienville. The story starts with a murder, and a really cool excavation involving Native bones and weapons, and then turns into an investigation against the excessively rich and powerful. Set in Bienville, Mississippi (which, translated to English, literally means “Good City”) , with a large cast of characters, “Cemetery Road” is a very lengthy tome about power, family and one’s moral code, and has that recognizable Illes’ charm. Marshall was a great character, albeit very naïve he was charming and level-headed. Right from the beginning, we are introduced to his lover, Jet, a woman he has a history with from back in middle school, the two of them perpetually caught in a star-crossed-lovers scenario. I DETESTED the character of Jet. I don’t know if this was Illes’ intention but she was grating, narcissistic, exceptionally selfish and exploitive. The only redeeming quality she had was that she was the mother to young Kevin, and he wasn’t featured enough in the book to give me any solace. She complained the entire novel about how hard it was to be married to her super rich and powerful husband (whom she married because he was super rich and powerful) , but yet was sleeping with Marshall on the side, controlling his life from every angle. She must have been either ethereally gorgeous, or Marshall and Jet’s husband Paul were immature and deviant. Jet aside, the novel was told well. It started right off the hop, with the excavation of bones and murder of Buck, and continued to weave a tale of mystery and intrigue right up until the very end. Illes goes back and forth, taunting a reader with his storyline, pulling the rug out from under you right when you think you have it all figured out. When it finally ends it is a relief (as mentioned, the story is lengthy. The audio version alone had 19 discs) but it is also satisfying. I have not yet found anything comparable to Illes Southern charm writing style, and it is always delightful when I finally get the chance to read a new work of his. Highly recommended if you have the time, “Cemetery Road” is a dark and twisty tale of the underbellies of society, and the manipulations pulled by those hiding in the background.

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