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I love his voice and narration and how he ties it all together without hyperbole. Loved his journalism since Teacher’s Pet, one of my favorites which actually got justice for the victim. This story so well done too. Never boring.
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The detail of this story seems a little much for some based off other reviews but I find it provides a good background to the story and shows a full picture of the horrors that occurred. Fantastic presentation
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I would never have read the actual book not having known about it in the US, so I appreciate the audiobook coming out as a podcast. As a resident of Oregon and a patient of Kaiser Permanente, it is sad to find out that this deadly physician and con artist ended up in Australia, only to once again be protected by doctors and bureaucrats. Too many people suffered and died as a result. I appreciate the focus on the victims.
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Investigations such as these are essential in a system as convoluted as healthcare. The reviewers complaining about the level of detail have hopefully never experienced being a victim to those we trust with our lives in our most vulnerable states. I can’t recommend this podcast enough.
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The topic started off interesting but seriously drags on after the author loses the story that sucked us in to start: The Neville family and their tragedy. What happened to them? I keep expecting the author will pick the story back up after fleshing details about the derelict Dr. but I’m HOURS in and he’s just going on and on about the problems with Queensland healthcare. This is not in any kind of podcast format. It is not lively nor engaging at all. It is the author reading in a fairly flat, monotone voice, mixed in with poor voice actors also just reading from the book, not really engaged or trying to to take on the personas of the people they are portraying. Contrast this audiobook with a true podcast style like Adrift. Now there’s a really engaging one! It also had voice actors but they were engaged and believable. You actually thought they were the real people they portrayed.
Clearly, not all authors are cut out to do podcasts.
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This started out really interesting, but there were so many tangents and it became so convoluted that it was very difficult to follow. Too many names. I would’ve had to take notes to keep track of it.
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