Noggle Stones Wil Radcliffe
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- Arts
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In this podiobook: Shunned by his people and tormented by nightmare visions, Bugbear, the mad goblin scholar, ventures into the wilderness with his ne'er-do-well cousin, Tudmire, to seek out an ancient ruin and the lost wisdom it holds.Soon the cousins find themselves embroiled in cosmic events as their magical world of Annwfn is merged with 19th Century Earth after an accident concerning a mysterious scroll Tudmire acquires in a crooked game of Noggle Stones. While fleeing the enraged ogres they cheated, Bugbear and Tudmire happen upon Martin Manchester, who appears to be a creature of mythology known as a human. Bugbear takes Manchester as his apprentice, agreeing to teach him the empowering ways of Non-Logical Thought. The trio soon discovers that dark forces have aligned against them, and the two worlds may have been merged only to be destroyed!
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35. As the Bee Flies - Noggle Stones
In this episode: Bugbear ventures out into the world to seek information on a mysterious threat more ancient than the Shadow Smithhimself!
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34. The Wedding - Noggle Stones
In this episode: As Willow Prairie rebuilds, the people celebratethe union of two lives and two worlds.
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33. Burning the Tea Fields - Noggle Stones
In this episode: In the aftermath of war, Bugbearreflects on his life.
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32. The Noggle War - Noggle Stones
In this episode: Maga leads the people of Willow Prairie intobattle against the Shadow Smith's hordes.
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31. The Non-Logical Nook - Noggle Stones
In this episode: Bugbear and Manchester awaken in astrange valley where a familiar friend prepares them for their finalconfrontation with the Shadow Smith!
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30. War Song - Noggle Stones
In this episode: Maga and Riley struggle against Dunderbeck for thehearts and minds of the people of Willow Prairie
Customer Reviews
Wicked
a wonderfull old fashiond fantasy tale with gobblins ogers and trolls and the like!!
Who does a kid's story without doing the voices?
The writing is clearly meant to convey a children's story, but the reader keeps a stultifyingly boring monotone for the entire tale. Ogres, goblins and humans in one book, and they all speak with the same voice? Puh-lease. The writing was decent, but I couldn't listen to the reader again if someone paid me.