
A Parade of Horribles (Dungeon Crawler Carl, Book 8), by Matt Dinniman | Free Audiobook
10 May 2026Audiobook details
A quiet life, a buried secret, a world coming undone
Artie Dam has built a life that looks steady from the outside. He teaches history to eleventh graders on the Massachusetts coast, sails alone on weekends, and has been married to the same woman for thirty years. He is present, polite, and largely invisible to himself. But underneath the surface, he carries a persistent sense of disconnection, a feeling that the people around him, even those closest to him, are strangers.
Then something happens. A single piece of information reaches Artie that does not fit the life he thought he was living, and suddenly the question he has been turning over in silence, how little we truly know one another, becomes impossible to ignore. He begins reaching for something more honest, in his conversations, his relationships, and in the way he understands himself.
Set against the unsettled backdrop of 2024 America, Elizabeth Strout's new standalone novel moves with her characteristic quietness and precision. In fewer than 230 pages, she examines what goes unspoken between fathers and sons, husbands and wives, friends and strangers, and what it costs, or frees us, to finally say it.

I came to this one knowing Strout's work well. Olive Kitteridge, My Name Is Lucy Barton, the whole interconnected web of Maine and Massachusetts lives she has built across her recent novels. The Things We Never Say is a departure in one sense: Artie Dam belongs to no previous cast. He is new, and he is very much his own kind of quiet.
What drew me in was the central question Artie keeps circling, whether we have free will, whether the choices we make are really ours. It sounds abstract, but Strout grounds it in the most specific situations. A dinner party conversation that turns strange. A son who feels unreachable. A secret that arrives late in life and has no clean resolution. The book does not answer the question. It just sits with it, the way you sit with something that has no answer, and that restraint is what makes it work.
The political backdrop matters more than I expected. The novel is set in the months leading up to the 2024 US election, and Artie's dread about the country bleeds into every interaction. Strout does not editorialize much, but the atmosphere is unmistakable. You feel the weight of it on every page, this sense that the rules that held things together have quietly stopped applying.
At around five hours, this is one of her shorter books. It reads as a novella more than a novel, and I think it works better for that. Nothing is padded. Every scene earns its place. The father-son dynamic in the second half stopped me more than once. Strout has a way of describing tenderness that does not ask you to find it touching. It just is, and you feel it without being cued.
Robert Petkoff narrates, and the match is very good. He keeps Artie measured, slightly inward, without making him flat. There is a quality to his pacing that suits Strout's prose well, the sentences land with the weight she puts into them rather than being smoothed over. The quieter passages are where his performance is strongest.
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The Things We Never Say by Elizabeth Strout is her new standalone novel, released May 5, 2026, by Random House. It follows Artie Dam, a history teacher on the Massachusetts coast, whose calm exterior conceals years of quiet disconnection. When a family secret surfaces, he is forced to revisit what he knows, or thought he knew, about the people closest to him. The audiobook runs approximately five hours and is narrated by Robert Petkoff.
Take advantage of the free trial, cancellable at any time, and hear Robert Petkoff bring Strout's precise, measured prose to life across 6h35 of listening. His narration keeps the right distance, close enough to feel the weight of Artie's interior life, without over-explaining it.
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