Steel and Dust book one Audiobook By Wendell Sweet cover art

Steel and Dust book one

Virtual Voice Sample

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This title uses virtual voice narration

Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
The whispers began subtly, almost apologetically. News anchors, their smiles a little too tight, reported on an uptick in seismic activity around Yellowstone. The caldera, a slumbering beast of unimaginable power, seemed to be grumbling in its sleep. Geologists, their voices tight with concern, spoke of rising pressures, of magma chambers stirring from their millennia-long slumber. But to the average American, preoccupied with mortgages, commutes, and the relentless march of consumer culture, these were distant rumblings, easily dismissed. The earth had always moved; it was a fact of life, a footnote in the daily news cycle.

Then came the other anomalies, the unsettling patterns that flickered across the screens like errant static. Unusual deaths, unexplained disappearances, a morbid curiosity that briefly captivated, only to be swept away by the next headline. A hiker vanishing without a trace in the vast wilderness, a family found dead in their home with no signs of forced entry, their bodies strangely untouched. These were brushed aside as tragic accidents, isolated incidents, the unfortunate side effects of a busy, complex world. The media, ever hungry for a sensational story, would briefly latch onto them, then move on, leaving behind only a lingering, unexamined disquiet. The public, saturated with a constant barrage of information and misinformation, developed a powerful, unconscious filter. It was easier, safer, to categorize these as fear-mongering, as the sensationalism peddled by sensationalists seeking clicks and ratings. Why dwell on the morbid when there were new shows to binge and new products to acquire?

Yet, in the quiet corners of the nation, in the hushed conversations of concerned scientists and the worried glances of local law enforcement, a different narrative was beginning to form. These weren't isolated incidents; they were threads, fraying at the edges of civilization, hinting at a larger, more sinister pattern. The earth’s unrest was more than just geological. The unusual deaths, the disappearances – they spoke of something beyond the scope of natural disasters or human malice. They hinted at forces unseen, unimaginable, stirring in the shadows.

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