wordfence domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home2/forroe88/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131For an audiobook, this is a nightmare. How do you make a listener care about two beings who have no facial expressions, no breath, no heartbeat? How do you convey sarcasm from a metal skull? How do you make a time-loop exciting when the character feels no fear of death?
The plot is deceptively simple: Both Trazyn and Orikan want a McGuffin, the “Astrarium Mysterios.” But over the course of 12,000 years of in-universe time, this chase destroys worlds, rewrites history, gets both of them killed dozens of times (Necrons can upload their consciousness into new bodies), and culminates in a courtroom drama and a kaiju battle. The book’s genius is its tone. It is simultaneously hilarious (Trazyn’s obsession with museum curation, Orikan’s petty legal filings) and genuinely tragic (their isolation as the last conscious beings of a dead race). infinite and the divine audiobook
Enter Richard Reed. The single most important element of this audiobook is the narrator. Richard Reed is not a newcomer to Black Library (he’s narrated The Twice-Dead King series), but The Infinite and the Divine is his masterwork. He doesn’t just read the book; he performs a two-handed play. Trazyn the Infinite: The Antique Collector Reed gives Trazyn a voice that is patrician, dry, and endlessly amused. Imagine a British museum curator who has stolen the British Museum. His tone is light, almost conversational, with a rising inflection at the end of his clever observations. When Trazyn steals a priceless artifact, Reed sounds delighted . When Trazyn is outsmarted, Reed injects a petulant, almost childish huff. Crucially, there is no robotic monotone. Reed understands that Trazyn is the most human of the Necrons—he loves art, history, and theater. His voice is the sound of a god who has become a tourist. Orikan the Diviner: The Bitter Genius In contrast, Orikan’s voice is sharp, reedy, and perpetually irritated. Where Trazyn is smooth, Orikan is spiky. Reed gives him a nasal, fast-talking quality—the voice of a man who is always right, always angry about it, and always one step away from screaming. When Orikan rewinds time to win a legal argument, Reed delivers the dialogue with a frantic, manic energy. His Orikan sounds exhausted by Trazyn’s existence, and that exhaustion is the engine of the comedy. The Chemistry The magic happens in scenes where the two banter. Reed switches voices mid-sentence with breathtaking speed. In one famous scene, Trazyn and Orikan are trapped in a collapsing cathedral, arguing about who broke a statue. Reed plays it like an old married couple bickering in a burning building. The vocal distinction is so clear that you never need a dialogue tag. You know who is speaking by the attitude in the delivery. Part 3: The Challenge of the Emotionless – Subtext Over Text A major criticism one could level at Necron fiction is the lack of emotional stakes. They don’t bleed. They don’t sweat. They don’t cry. A lesser narrator would read the lines flatly, leaning into the “robot” aspect. Reed does the opposite. He leans into the subtext . For an audiobook, this is a nightmare
In the vast, gothic cathedral of Warhammer 40,000 lore, stories are typically soaked in blood, zealotry, and the screams of the dying. Space Marines chant litanies of hate, Inquisitors whisper heresies, and the sound of a chainsword revving is the genre’s signature note. Then, there is The Infinite and the Divine by Robert Rath. Unlike any Black Library novel before it, this is a high-concept, centuries-spanning comedy of manners, a tragedy of obsession, and a heist thriller—all starring two immortal, undying Necron lords. And yet, the novel’s true ascension to greatness might not be on the page, but in the ear. The audiobook edition, narrated by the incomparable Richard Reed, transforms a very good book into an unforgettable experience . How do you make a time-loop exciting when
Available on Audible, Black Library’s direct site, and most audiobook retailers. Seek out the version narrated by Richard Reed (there is no other). Prepare for 13 hours of the best rivalry in science fiction. And remember: The one who steals the most, wins.
When the book describes Trazyn “feeling a sensation that might, in a biological creature, be called nostalgia,” Reed pauses. He lowers his volume. He lets the word hang. You hear the void where a sigh should be. When Orikan realizes that his greatest enemy is also his only remaining peer in the universe, Reed’s voice cracks—just slightly—on the final line of the chapter.