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Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids: Stories Audiobook, by Leyna Krow Play Audiobook Sample

Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids: Stories Audiobook

Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids: Stories Audiobook, by Leyna Krow Play Audiobook Sample
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Read By: Emma Galvin, Kimberly Farr, Kristen Sieh, Lauren Fortgang, Rebecca Lowman, Frankie Corzo, Carlotta Brentan, Gilli Messer, Helen Laser, Aspen Vincent, Amy Jensen, Dominique Salvacion, Amara Brady Publisher: Penguin Audio Listen Time: at 1.0x Speed 5.83 hours at 1.5x Speed 4.38 hours at 2.0x Speed Release Date: January 2025 Format: Unabridged Audiobook ISBN: 9780593944110

Quick Stats About this Audiobook

Total Audiobook Chapters:

19

Longest Chapter Length:

57:53 minutes

Shortest Chapter Length:

30 seconds

Average Chapter Length:

27:58 minutes

Audiobooks by this Author:

2
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Publisher Description

“These gripping, magical tales span time travel, portals, menacing butterflies, and more. A can’t-miss meditation on families and survival.”

People

“A gorgeous book that also serves as a series of unanswerable, probing questions: How did we get here? How will we move forward? Can we still love, despite the wreckage? This is devastating work, and I mean that as a compliment. Very rarely have I come across a set of stories so genuinely moving. A searing collection that attempts to place the world delicately in our fumbling, undeserving hands.” —Kristen Arnett, New York Times bestselling author of Mostly Dead Things and With Teeth

A MOST ANTICIPATED BOOK OF 2025: Lit Hub, The Millions

What do we owe our family and friends in times of wild uncertainty?


That’s the question the women of Leyna Krow’s beguiling, darkly fabulist story collection grapple with as they strive to be good mothers, daughters, sisters, grandmothers, wives, and companions in a world that is constantly shifting around them. Set in the Pacific Northwest, these stories blend high concept magic with the sometimes subtle, other times glaring, realities of climate change.

As protagonists contend with doppelgänger babies, hordes of time travelers, mysterious portals, and supernatural siblings, there lurks in the background the effects of the region’s rapidly shifting environment. There are wildfires, wind storms, unrelenting heat, disrupted butterfly migration patterns, a new plague, and a catastrophe on the slopes of Mount Rainier that reverberates through three generations of a single family over the course of a half dozen linked stories.

With Krow’s signature blend of sardonic whimsy and unsettling insight, Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids imagines the rules to be broken, choices to be made, and even crimes to be had for the sake of the people, and places, we love.

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"In this trenchant collection from Krow, uncanny moments punctuate the characters’ day-to-day realities. . . . In ‘A Plan to Save Us All,’ a series of time travelers descend upon a Pacific Northwest suburb to warn residents of a deadly pathogen that will wipe them all out, but the time travelers turn out to be more interested in getting laid than stopping the virus, and the narrator has sex with many of them. In ‘Ultraboost Supplements for Good Health,’ a group of women agree to test a vitamin one of them has developed, causing them to turn on their husbands, menstruate uncontrollably, and possibly turn into werewolves. Krow’s bracing and curious stories reveal what gets lost in the quest for perfection."

— Publishers Weekly

Quotes

  • Leyna Krow’s Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids is a stunning collection that transforms the mundane into the magical. Each story brims with wonder and the surreal, pushing the boundaries of reality while plunging the reader deep into human emotions. Krow, a masterful storyteller, captures the bizarre and beautiful in equal measure, making this collection both riveting and unforgettable. Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids is a dazzling testament to Krow’s talent, offering readers not just a captivating journey into the unknown, but a brilliant return to our everyday lives forever marked by what we had witnessed.

    — Morgan Talty, national bestselling author of Night of the Living Rez and Fire Exit: A Novel
  • This book doesn’t just entertain—it explodes. Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids balances unearthly happenings with those concretely upon us. Krow deftly pulls readers into her tilted universe through the veneer of domesticity. Once there, we are haunted by something far more absurd than babies who become men in nine weeks and supplements that turn women into werewolves—a natural world that cries for our attention and goes unheard. Krow writes with both a masterful weirdness and the wise compassion of a human who loves our beautiful Earth.

    — Emily Habeck, national bestselling author of Shark Heart: A Love Story
  • A gorgeous book that also serves as a series of unanswerable, probing questions: how did we get here? how will we move forward? can we still love, despite the wreckage? This is devastating work, and I mean that as a compliment. Very rarely have I come across a set of stories so genuinely moving. A searing collection that attempts to place the world delicately in our fumbling, undeserving hands.

    — Kristen Arnett, New York Times bestselling author of Mostly Dead Things and With Teeth
  • Leyna Krow's Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids is beguiling and beautiful, funny and poignant, and mesmerizing at every turn. These strange stories have a delightful wildness about them: they turn our everyday world askew so as to reveal complicated truths beneath the surface. Leyna Krow is the perfect storyteller for this moment, for she so deftly captures the brutality and absurdity of living in what often feels like the end of the world.

    — Edan Lepucki, New York Times bestselling author of California
  • A gorgeous book that also serves as a series of unanswerable, probing questions: How did we get here? How will we move forward? Can we still love, despite the wreckage? This is devastating work, and I mean that as a compliment. Very rarely have I come across a set of stories so genuinely moving. A searing collection that attempts to place the world delicately in our fumbling, undeserving hands.

    — Kristen Arnett, New York Times bestselling author of Mostly Dead Things and With Teeth
  • In this trenchant collection from Krow, uncanny moments punctuate the characters’ day-to-day realities. . . . In ‘A Plan to Save Us All,’ a series of time travelers descend upon a Pacific Northwest suburb to warn residents of a deadly pathogen that will wipe them all out, but the time travelers turn out to be more interested in getting laid than stopping the virus, and the narrator has sex with many of them. In ‘Ultraboost Supplements for Good Health,’ a group of women agree to test a vitamin one of them has developed, causing them to turn on their husbands, menstruate uncontrollably, and possibly turn into werewolves. Krow’s bracing and curious stories reveal what gets lost in the quest for perfection.

    — Publishers Weekly
  • Krow explores forest fires, volcanoes, time travel, and the lives of octopuses with verve and wit. . . . Even in the midst of familial or environmental tragedies, Krow’s prose maintains a playful spirit.

    — Kirkus Reviews
  • Sinkhole grapples with the changing nature of the land we live upon, along with the everlasting urge to be in relation with one another, treating that desire as imperative and necessary even in the face of our planet’s decay. Each story is satisfying in its own right and intrinsic to the collection as a whole: at times speculative, at times starkly realistic, the world heats and floods cascade, and still the beating hearts of humanity continue to hope and fear and dream and love and love and love.

    — Lit Hub’s Most Anticipated Books of 2025
  • A distressed graduate student tries to warn her community about an impending mudslide. A mother creates a bond with her new child after he appears out of thin air. A scourge of butterflies threatens to destroy the ecosystem of a town even as it unites a grudging teenager and a local scientist. In these surreal stories, Krow imagines families facing both environmental collapse and the necessity of caring for one another in the most desperate times.

    — Alta
  • A gorgeous book that also serves as a series of unanswerable, probing questions: How did we get here? How will we move forward? Can we still love, despite the wreckage? This is devastating work, and I mean that as a compliment. Very rarely have I come across a set of stories so genuinely moving. A searing collection that attempts to place the world delicately in our fumbling, undeserving hands.

    — Kristen Arnett, New York Times bestselling author of Mostly Dead Things and With Teeth
  • This book doesn’t just entertain—it explodes. Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids balances unearthly happenings with those concretely upon us. Krow deftly pulls readers into her tilted universe through the veneer of domesticity. Once there, we are haunted by something far more absurd than babies who become men in nine weeks and supplements that turn women into werewolves—a natural world that cries for our attention and goes unheard. Krow writes with both a masterful weirdness and the wise compassion of a human who loves our beautiful Earth.

    — Emily Habeck, national bestselling author of Shark Heart: A Love Story
  • Leyna Krow's Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids is beguiling and beautiful, funny and poignant, and mesmerizing at every turn. These strange stories have a delightful wildness about them: they turn our everyday world askew so as to reveal complicated truths beneath the surface. Leyna Krow is the perfect storyteller for this moment, for she so deftly captures the brutality and absurdity of living in what often feels like the end of the world.

    — Edan Lepucki, New York Times bestselling author of California
  • Sinkhole grapples with the changing nature of the land we live upon, along with the everlasting urge to be in relation with one another, treating that desire as imperative and necessary even in the face of our planet’s decay. Each story is satisfying in its own right and intrinsic to the collection as a whole: at times speculative, at times starkly realistic, the world heats and floods cascade, and still the beating hearts of humanity continue to hope and fear and dream and love and love and love.

    — Lit Hub, "Most Anticipated Books of 2025"
  • In her second collection of short fiction, Krow amplifies surreal elements as she tells stories of ordinary lives. Her characters grapple with deadly viruses, climate change, and disasters of the Anthropocene’s wilderness.

    — The Millions, “Most Anticipated: The Great 2025 Winter Book Preview”
  • Krow weaves an ornate tapestry of tales. . . . Amid all the otherworldly phenomena around them, climate change creeps up on the characters in Krow's stories in different ways. . . . While the fabulous scenarios Krow creates in Sinkhole and Other Inexplicable Voids are truly far-fetched, there are still layers of truth buried deep within.

    — The Inlander
  • These gripping, magical tales span time travel, portals, menacing butterflies, and more. A can’t-miss meditation on families and survival.

    — People
  • Sinkhole perfectly captures the struggle to face the void we appear to be staring down each day as we plunge further into the climate crisis, and does it all while leaving us with a lasting feeling of hope and promise.

    — Chicago Review of Books
  • Krow explores forest fires, volcanoes, time travel, and the lives of octopuses with verve and wit. . . . Even in the midst of familial or environmental tragedies, Krow’s prose maintains a playful spirit.

    — Kirkus Reviews“Sinkhole and Other Inexplicable Voids combine magical powers, enchanting worlds that determine the fates of its characters, all while dealing with bigger themes and issues.
  • A dazzling, vivid collection. . . . Krow expertly threads together a handful of elements: magical or absurd developments, incisive snapshots of familial loves and fears, and haunting reflections on climate change disasters. . . . Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids is highly recommended.

    — Locus magazine

Sinkhole, and Other Inexplicable Voids Listener Reviews

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About the Narrators

Emma Galvin won the 2011 Audie Award for best fiction narration, was a finalist for the Audie Award in 2012, and won six AudioFile Earphones Awards for her narrations. A graduate of the Carnegie Mellon School of Drama, her film appearances include My Suicidal Sweetheart, A Perfect Fit, and The Big Bad Swim. She has performed in several regional theater productions, including Love Punky, The Power of Birds, and The Realm.

Kimberly Farr is an actress and winner of more than a dozen AudioFile Earphones Awards for narration. In 2025 she was named a Golden Voice, AudioFile magazine’s lifetime achievement honor for audiobook narrators. She has appeared on Broadway and at the New York Shakespeare Festival, the Roundabout Theatre, Playwright’s Horizons, and the American Place. She created the role of “Eve” in Arthur Miller’s first and only musical, Up from Paradise, which was directed by the author. She appeared with Vanessa Redgrave in the Broadway production of The Lady from the Sea and has acted in regional theaters across the country, including a performance in the original production of The 1940’s Radio Hour at Washington, DC’s Arena Stage.

Kristen Sieh is a voice and television actress. She has appeared on such television shows as Law & Order and Boardwalk Empire. She has also narrated several audio books.

Lauren Fortgang, a graduate of Fordham University’s Theater Program, is an actress, costume designer, and narrator. She has recorded everything from video games to textbooks. Her audiobook narrations have earned AudioFile Earphones Awards and placed her as a finalist for an Audie Award in 2014.

Rebecca Lowman is an actress and audiobook narrator who has won numerous Earphones Awards. She has starred in numerous television shows, including Law & Order, Big Love, NCIS, and Grey’s Anatomy, among many others. She earned her MFA from Columbia University.

Frankie Corzo is a film and voice-over actress and audiobook narrator. She obtained a BA degree in theater studies from Montclair State University.

Carlotta Brentan is a voice talent and audiobook narrator.

Sura Siu is a first-generation Asian American voiceover actress who has a passion for breathing life into characters, stories, and the printed word. When not performing, she enjoys playing video games, biking, and meditating.

Michael Crouch is an actor based in New York City. His audiobook narration has won the prestigious Audie Award for Best Narration, numerous Earphones Awards from AudioFile magazine, and Best of the Year accolades from Booklist, School Library Journal, and Publishers Weekly. He can also be heard on national commercials, cartoons, video games, and the animé series Pokémon XY and Yu-Gi-Oh! Arc-V.

Cassandra Campbell has won multiple Audie Awards, Earphones Awards, and the prestigious Odyssey Award for narration. She was been named a “Best Voice” by AudioFile magazine and in 2018 was inducted in Audible’s inaugural Narrator Hall of Fame.

Kimberly Farr is an actress and winner of more than a dozen AudioFile Earphones Awards for narration. In 2025 she was named a Golden Voice, AudioFile magazine’s lifetime achievement honor for audiobook narrators. She has appeared on Broadway and at the New York Shakespeare Festival, the Roundabout Theatre, Playwright’s Horizons, and the American Place. She created the role of “Eve” in Arthur Miller’s first and only musical, Up from Paradise, which was directed by the author. She appeared with Vanessa Redgrave in the Broadway production of The Lady from the Sea and has acted in regional theaters across the country, including a performance in the original production of The 1940’s Radio Hour at Washington, DC’s Arena Stage.