 My work here on YouTube is supported by viewers. Please follow the links in the description below where you can make one-time donations or you can go to the 30-second sci-fi website and pledge a small monthly amount to become a sponsor. Alright for this week's book review, this is the third week of October 2017. At first I was going to do a really heavy awful unpleasant book of some kind. I decided to do something light instead because for the final week I am going to do something really heavy. I'm here in the basement at the Game Night Lounge in Portland, by the way. They graciously allowed me to use this little space. All right now go ahead. You want to wave to the camera? This particular area is not open to the public and it's under heavy renovation right now but they've got this these great medieval tables and all these props and everything and this book death and company is a book about modern classic cocktails it says down at the bottom, but man what a title. What I'm going to recommend this week is a LibriVox selection. I've talked about LibriVox before. It is an online collection of public domain stories read by volunteers. They're free audiobooks is what they are. This particular collection is called Short, Ghost, and Horror Collection 29. I found this when I was looking for HDL stories to listen to on a recent drive to Seattle. This one HDL title came up as part of this collection and for the longest time I thought this was a book. This was some out-of-print book or whatever, but no it's just a collection of stories that LibriVox themselves put together. Stories that have been read by various volunteers. So they've been putting them together in collections and evidently there's more than 30 of these. This particular collection has some surprising stuff in it. Several Ambrose beer pieces including the occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge and the Spook House, which is one of my favorites. The audiobook is only eight minutes long and I'll include a link directly to that story below. I really like that one. And some pieces by Aldrin on Blackwood. There's some Edgar Allen Poe in here including the Telltale Heart. The piece by H.G. Wells in here is called Jimmy Goggle's The God and that caught my attention simply because the title is so strange and it made me wonder is is Goggle's a verb? Or is it somebody's name? It turns out it's a name, Jimmy Goggle's, and I'll let you read it to find out what that means. It's a memorable story. But I have to warn you it has the N-word in it, the racist N-word a lot. And there's some Nathaniel Hawthorne in here too. Young Goodman Brown, which is a story I had heard about but never but never read. I didn't think the writing was particularly good, but then the ending changed my mind about it. And there's Mark Twain, a piece called A Ghost Story, which I'd never heard before. And it's Mark Twain. The one piece I didn't finish, it's number 20. The last one is by Sir Walter Scott. It's called Wandering Willie's Tale. It's an hour long for one thing and the reader is using a very thick Scottish accent, which is appropriate for the narrator of the story, but I couldn't understand a word he was saying. I may try again later. But yeah, this is some good stuff, some good light listening. And if you've never been to LibriVox.org before, this is your chance. See you next week with another review. Please remember to press that like button. It helps my videos get seen. And then subscribe so you can come back next time. I do science fiction, book, TV, and movie reviews all the time. And please consider becoming a patron. There's a link in the description below.