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Tom Segura jokes about supermodels in his Netflix special, "Sledgehammer".
The Otto Loser Mysteries explicit
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Manage series 2655581
Вміст надано migrationbooks. Весь вміст подкастів, включаючи епізоди, графіку та описи подкастів, завантажується та надається безпосередньо компанією migrationbooks або його партнером по платформі подкастів. Якщо ви вважаєте, що хтось використовує ваш захищений авторським правом твір без вашого дозволу, ви можете виконати процедуру, описану тут https://uk.player.fm/legal.
A series of audiobooks celebrating the mysterious fate of Otto Loser
…
continue reading
64 епізодів
Відзначити всі (не)відтворені ...
Manage series 2655581
Вміст надано migrationbooks. Весь вміст подкастів, включаючи епізоди, графіку та описи подкастів, завантажується та надається безпосередньо компанією migrationbooks або його партнером по платформі подкастів. Якщо ви вважаєте, що хтось використовує ваш захищений авторським правом твір без вашого дозволу, ви можете виконати процедуру, описану тут https://uk.player.fm/legal.
A series of audiobooks celebrating the mysterious fate of Otto Loser
…
continue reading
64 епізодів
Усі епізоди
×This is the final episode of Anton’s Bark . It begins with Otto’s reading of Chapter Fourteen of Otto in Flames . The fourteenth chapter of Anton’s novel produces the miraculous ending the writer had always been looking for, but had never been able to find. Now that the writer is lost to the mire of the Unseen, and his book as been lost to time, the real Otto discovers he is finally free. What happens next, after the fictitious Otto manages to reunite himself with his family in Vienna, is the real Otto’s ending to Otto in Flames . At the conclusion of this last episode there is nothing left but for the real Otto to recall, as poetically as he can, how Anton was finally able to escape from the cave and return to his wife, Oksana, still painting a portrait of him in their loft, on 18 February 2019. Thank you for listening.…
In an echo of the time Anton followed Urania through his own town at the beginning of the real Otto’s telling Anton’s Bark , Chapter Thirteen has the fictitious Otto following Marie down a street, on a dark night in Vienna. She has the fated money. He now suspects what her secret is, which is to say what the writer has in store for him as Marie enters a private club. A potent feedback-loop has begun to irrupt between the fictitious Otto’s life, and Anton’s experiences in the myth of Midas. The ending of Otto in Flames might ave been a foregone conclusion, yet the fictitious Otto would never have guessed at the true outcome. In the commentary that follows, we learn that as Anton never knew how his novel ended, despite his many efforts to find out, it falls to the real Otto to come up with an ending. That astonishing ending will be set out in Chapter Fourteen of Otto in Flames , next week. This episode ends with an account of what happened to Anton on returning to the cave with a puppet of the fictitious Otto in his mouth, a puppet answering to the name of Orpheus.…
Ever since 1999 Otto has known that by one-minute after midnight, on 19 February, 2019, his estranged wife Marie, would be with him in his hotel room. And in Anton’s mysteriously unfolding novel that is exactly what happens. Today, the real Otto reads Chapter Twelve for us. Now that that special midnight has come and gone, there are no more prophecies he might use to guide his fictitious self. And his quest to be reunited with his family is marred by the fact that he is still in possession 30,000 euros, which he now knows Marie badly needs. There is a sense in this chapter that Anton may be aware of Otto’s repugnance at being in the hero of Otto in Flames . While preoccupied with his adventures in the Unseen there is a sense that the writer may even be enjoying his hero’s predicament in Vienna. When it comes to Otto’s turn to tell us what happens to Anton, increasingly absorbed in a medieval version of the myth of Midas, the telling is also slyly exuberant, raising the thorny question of who is taking who for a walk.…
Otto’s reading of Chapter Eleven has him recounting how his fictitious self comes face to face with a ferocious dog. His premonition, that he would be attacked by such a dog, within twenty-four hours of arriving in Vienna, comes true. What the fictitious Otto didn’t know however, is that this attack would happen in the midst of an unexpected encounter with his son, Jakob. He doesn’t lose heart. His final premonition is that he will be safely in his hotel room with Marie, by midnight that night. The episode concludes with the real Otto’s description of Anton’s continuing adventures in the Unseen, which by now have become a wild retelling of a popular Greek myth. Still chasing after the Frenchman’s shoe, Anton races down a passage, which takes him into the Dark Ages. As Otto explains, it is apparent that Anton’s mind is somewhat adrift. The writer seems to have forgotten his desire to find out what happens in Otto in Flames. He only wants to get out of the cave, and back to his wife. Yet what happens Anton will have its consequences in Chapter Twelve of the novel, where Otto’s own quest to be reunited with his family continues.…
Chapter Ten embroils Otto even further into the unforeseen, during his second day in Vienna. By early evening he is ready to meet Marie again, and take her out on a date. His plan is to rescue the relationship he’d had with her, some twenty years before. He is sure that it is Marie he is about to meet in the lobby of his hotel, because his prophecy had always been that she would be with him in his hotel room by midnight that night. Anton however, would have been able to remind him that prophecies too, are open to misinterpretation. It is in fact, a surprise that awaits the fictitious Otto in the lobby. And yet, it is left to the real Otto to narrate what happens to Anton in the Unseen. But while the writer is trapped in a cave, the fictitious Otto finds himself trapped by a dog. He provides a detailed explanation concerning how all of this could have happened, but despite himself, the real Otto’s descriptions of Anton’s quest to escape from the cave, by chasing after a Frenchman’s shoe, can only have the effect of feeding back into what happens to his fictional self in Chapter Eleven.…
Despite the entanglement of its erstwhile writer, now trapped deep in the cave, Otto in Flames has taken on a momentum of its own. Today, the real Otto reads Chapter Nine for us. This chapter follows the meeting he’d had with Marie at the Spitzenhof café. Since 1999, the fictional Otto has known through his prophecies more or less what would happen to him on his first day in Vienna. Despite his bitterness at being nothing more than a character in a series of Anton Matins novels, the ninth chapter of Anton’s book sees Otto ensnared in an unforeseen predicament with Marie, he can’t wriggle out of. They leave the Spitzenhof separately. But Otto’s prophecy, such as it is, tells him that he will certainly see her again, back in his hotel room, at midnight that night. The only way the real Otto can influence events now, is by narrating his version of Anton’s wild-goose chase for a shoe, thrown by a lost French cartographer, down a cave passage in the Unseen. The shoe leads the writer straight into a Greek myth, which in itself will signal the structure for Chapter Ten.…
The mystery of Chapter Eight is that the writer is no longer in a condition to be able to write it. Yet despite his condition, Anton is still able to imagine it. Even as far as the real Otto is concerned, this next chapter, which he reads for us, puts him where he’d always wanted to be, sitting opposite Marie in the Spitzenhof café. To his dismay however, and because of the interferences of the godly priest, the fictional Otto finds himself in possession of a large sum of money, which he’d never predicted having. By means of his capacity to narrate, the real Otto tries to take control of Anton’s book, or at least to take control of the writer who’d been swallowed into Unseen while writing Otto in Flames . And so, a new story begins. As the real Otto sees it, Anton Matins has become a strange creature, on an urgent quest to get back out of the cave, in order to be reunited with his long lost wife, Oksana. It is with this in mind that Chapter Nine begins to flow into Anton’s potent imagination.…
Today, Otto reads Chapter Seven for us. This is the last chapter Anton had been writing before he disappeared altogether. In this chapter the fictional Otto remains amorphous, somewhere in his memory. But he soon emerges, not quite into the Spitzenhof café again, but into Father Promentano’s operatic version of it. Otto’s reflections, following his reading of this chapter, centre on problems of the ‘self’. This is a conundrum, given that his own origins are to be found in a series of mystery novels. On this question, Otto explains that he has long believed himself to be an ‘automaton’, without the capacity to choose. While he was still a lawyer in England, the fictional Otto had been in a position to write a book about this. He completed the book before his fictional self was destined to return to Vienna. What the real Otto comes to realise about himself, and his written fate, no to mention Anton’s own passage through the Unseen, is that by stepping into the cave, the missing writer of Otto in Flames would go onto trigger an ‘intensification of the phenomenon of all possibilities’. This intensification includes some bizarre ways of drafting Chapter Eight.…
Otto’s reading of Chapter Six features his surprise meeting with Father Promentano at the Spitzenhof café. He’d been expecting to meet Marie there. He’d had a clear premonition of that meeting. As a result, the fictional Otto can only react angrily when this doesn’t happen. We discover that the fictional Otto finds himself in conversations with the peculiar priest, a Greek god in disguise called Father Promentano, who delivers a carrot, followed by a stick. The carrot is a large sum of money, the stick is a nightmare. And so, while sitting with a deity in the Spitzenhof café, having refused divine money, the fictional Otto is plummeted to a place in his memory in 1999, when he was last with Marie before they separated, and he went to England. They were on holiday together. At one point during this holiday, the fictional Otto sees his future come alive, through a series of curious prophecies. The sixths chapter is followed by the real Otto’s brief commentary on a few sentences that will occur in Chapter Seven, as well as his account of Anton’s evermore desperate attempts to get back into the cave, in the year 1882.…
This episode begins with the real Otto’s reading of Chapter Five . It is a pivotal chapter in Anton’s novel where, after waking up from a nightmare in his hotel room in Vienna, the fictional Otto arranges to meet his estranged wife, Marie, at the Spitzenhof café, only to be shocked and disappointed when he gets there. We learn that the fictional Otto has been endowed with special but difficult to interpret powers of foresight. Since 1999 he’s been able to foresee what was going to happen to him within twenty-four hours of his arrival in Vienna. Unfortunately, the details of these prophecies are sketchy. Not to be thwarted by Anton’s designs for him, in the second half of this episode, the real Otto emerges once again, in his own right, putting him in pole-position to challenge Anton’s version of what happens to him in Otto in Flames , through his telling of what happens to Anton after he disappears and tries to write an improved draft of Chapter Six.…
Otto describes the words and phrases that occur to Anton, as he sits in his favourite café, trying to re-write Chapter Five of his novel. Things go well for a time. And although the real Otto would rather have nothing to do with Anton’s book, he is compelled to admit that it is because everything Anton imagines comes true, that he and everything else, exist at all. He describes Anton’s extraordinary visit to Urania’s offices in order to purchase a map of the Unseen, only to find himself plunged into his most vivid immersion yet, involving the peculiar priest and a large sum of money. In the second part of this episode, Otto maintains his position as meta-narrator. Having turned the tables on Anton, so that he might inspire what is going on, he moves onto the afternoon of Wednesday, 18 February 2019; a momentous moment in Anton’s life, the better part of which has him sitting grumpily on a rocking horse, posing for Oksana’s portrait of him.…
The real Otto admits that being a character in Anton’s novels has had him going around in circles. He’s unhappy about it, but there’s no obvious way for him to avoid what he is. He explains that Anton had decided to do some research at the university library. The aim was to locate references to the cave his future reader, a statue of Heraclitus, resides in. In the library, the writer discovers an eighteenth century map, and is drawn to a location on that map, called Cape Unknown. This sends him into an immersion enabling him to hurtle through what he imagines the whole universe to be. From that vantage in the Unseen, it becomes easier for Anton spot the cave again. But before he can step inside, to find out what happens in his novel, he is whisked back into the library. He tries to write a few new sentences. They will find their way into Chapter Four, and suggest that the fictional Otto will end up shouting at himself. The episode concludes with the real Otto reading that fourth chapter , which concerns what happens to him in a hotel room, on his first night in Vienna.…
Anton’s abilities as a writer have by now foundered. He is so confounded by what he is imagining, that it becomes necessary to redraft what he has written, in order to accommodate the visions being visited upon him by his muse. The places he goes to in his mind come to be spoken of as the Unseen. In this episode, the real Otto tells of another of Anton’s immersions in the Unseen. On this occasion the writer attempts to get back into the cave, where he believes his future reader may still be able to help with an account of what happens in Otto in Flames . While redrafting Chapter Three, Anton finds himself at the entrance to the cave, but can’t help imagining that he will be ambushed there, as soon as he tries to go in. The episode concludes with the real Otto’s reading of the third chapter of Anton’s novel, in which his fictional self, having returned to Vienna, has every reason to suspect that the priest on the flight over from London has been following him.…
It is confirmed by the real Otto that as the muse Urania works her magic on him, Anton loses control of his novel. Her inspirations provoke Anton’s imagination in such a way as to make it impossible for him to write anything that makes sense; and because whatever he imagines comes true, the writer’s confusion spirals further out of control. He believes the only way forward is to imagine his future reader. His plan is to imagine meeting that person and asking about what happens in Otto in Flames . Thus, Anton is consumed by another inspired immersion. He is transported to a cave, where he ends up speaking to a statue of the pre-Socratic philosopher, Heraclitus. Because the statue has read Otto in Flames to the last page, Anton assumes that this must be his future reader. But his attempts to speak to the statue are foiled. Having talked us through these strange events, the real Otto completes the episode with a reading of Chapter Two of Anton’s book, which concerns a one-way flight from London to Vienna, sitting next to passenger dressed as a priest.…
Otto in Flames is being read to us by the real Otto Loser. Chapter One is about the dream he is meant to have been born in. The action begins in the UK, during the early hours of 17 February, 2019. The fictional Otto is on his way to Vienna. He wants to be reunited with his estranged wife and children there. Because this is a story Anton is writing, it is something the real Otto can’t escape. But he can talk about it. Having read the first chapter, the real Otto describes Anton’s attempts to write Chapter Two. As the real Otto sees it, Anton believes Urania is sending him inspired messages about his third novel, which leads to the troubling question: Who is in charge of the writing, anyway? As well as observations about Anton’s predicament, trying to write creatively in difficult circumstances , the real Otto mentions the writer’s long suffering wife, Oksana. Early in February 2019, shortly after Anton began drafting Otto in Flames , Oksana decided to paint a portrait of her husband, which would land the writer in the greatest quandary of his life.…
Welcome to the third series in the Otto Loser Mysteries podcast. This is the first Otto Loser Mystery to be told by Otto himself. From the outset Otto’s position is that he is able to speak independently, rather than as a character in a series of novels. The story he tells is called Anton’s Bark. It is about the obscure Austrian writer, Anton Matins, creator of the fictitious Otto. We learn that Anton has begun to write his third and final novel about Otto’s life. The writer is working as usual, at his regular table, in his favourite café. As he drafts Chapter One of Otto in Flames, Anton is struck by the vision of a beautiful muse, reading a book in his café. As she sits there, the muse grants the writer a single, extraordinary gift. It dawns on him, after a time, that everything he imagines comes true. It is the real Otto who recounts these events. He explains that he himself came into being, as a real person, through a dream Anton imagined him having.…
This is a trailer for Anton’s Bark , the third and final audiobook in the Otto Loser Mysteries series. Anton’s Bark will be available to download from early January, 2022. The first two audiobooks, Something Borsuk Said and The Scarlet Godwins will continue to be available to download for free, wherever you get your podcasts. For further information please visit www.migrationbooks.com…
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The Otto Loser Mysteries

1 The Scarlet Godwins - Twenty-One 1:04:06
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This is the final episode of The Scarlet Godwins , and the second of Marley’s unsent letters. In it she is still waiting for Otto’s second coming. She had been expecting him to come back sooner. This twenty-first letter is Marley’s final revelation. She writes in it, that if Otto doesn’t visit her in prison again, he’ll never know what happened. But if he does come back, he will be sworn to secrecy. Otto is nearing the end of his long walk. The story of Izzy’s involvement in Marley’s case has come to its climax. It is a climax that did indeed provoke Otto into a second prison visit, this time without his daughter. It is during that visit that Marley passes Otto her second ‘unsent letter’. She recites the missing poem, Secret Scarlet , and tells Otto what really happened to her sister. Finally, the question of whether Otto should be sworn to secrecy is answered.…
Marley recounts the story of Otto’s first prison visit, with Izzy by his side, posing as his assistant. But Marley is too perceptive not to have noticed that there was more to her solicitor and his ‘assistant’ than met the eye. Very proud of herself she hints officially that she slipped her solicitor a secret nineteenth letter. Otto, thinking about all of this, still on his ramble, has left the beach, and is back in town. His reflections initially take him to the day before that first prison visit, which was the first full day he spent with his daughter. By then, Izzy had read the eighteen letters that Otto had received from Marley, which prompted a list of questions. She had begun to formulate a theory of her own.…
This is the first of Marley’s unsent letters, where the twisted truth begins to come out. It begins by telling Otto of his prison visits, as they had been foretold. On the first of these, Marley prophecies that she will be able to slip her unsent letter into his pocket. It is part of her prophecy that this unsent letter, full of revelations, will have Otto rushing back for his second coming. As he walks along a beach, Otto recalls how easily Izzy became involved in Marley’s case, and how he tried to resist her ideas about it.…
Marley prepares for Otto’s first prison visit, something she found out about through a ‘little birdie’. The trouble with corresponding with your solicitor from a prison cell, she is ever at pains to point out, is that there are others snooping on your mail. In this important letter Marley recites the suggestive poem called Two Birds. Beyond that, she discloses that there is another all-revealing poem called Secret Scarlet . Meanwhile, Otto’s long walk has taken to him the wistful memories he has of meeting his daughter in London for the first time in nearly twenty-years.…
In this rant of a letter, Marley, furious at Otto for challenging her credibility, remonstrates with him freely, before she discloses more scientific facts about her body, explains why she lied to the jury in her trial, and appears to deny that Julius Haft was of any consequence. Otto is thinking about his journey to London, on the pretext of investigating Marley’s case further, but in realty, in order to meet, for the first time in nearly two decades, his daughter, Izzy. His thoughts take him to Marley’s astonishing eighteenth letter, which introduced the poem Two Birds .…
Otto releases Marley from her vow. At this she goes into over-drive. In her sixteenth letter she uses every foul word she can think of. She explains that because her letters are being vetted she can’t write what she really wants to write. Otto simply has to visit. She tells him that she lied during her trial, so the jury wouldn’t know about the raging row she’d had with Charlotte, the day Charlotte died. As Otto recalls this, his thoughts turn again to Eve Gillian’s case, which was also about the difficulty of lying in court. But for a short conversation with Emilia Godwin, Otto would have closed Marley’s file then and there. He recalls it was at this point in his life, that person he’s been talking to in his head all along, gets in touch.…
Marley is feeling fobbed off. She accuses Otto of ignoring her, not writing back, and not coming to visit. When she’s satisfied she’s made her point, she takes up the story of meeting Charlottes’s family for the first time, and reveals an amorous secret while she’s at it. The person Otto is talking to in his thoughts has yet to make an appearance. It is clear that when this person did come into his life, everything changed. Being so skeptical, and with the restraints of legal aid, Otto asks himself, what exactly made him pursue Marley’s case? It may simply have been, he reflects, that because he’d entered a period of personal turbulence following the attack on him, he’d been more inclined to see reasons why the case needed to be investigated. But there were better reasons yet to come.…
Marley’s response to a second letter from Otto, asking for Louise’s full name, takes many turns. For a while, she’d been asking Otto to release her from her vow not to swear. She berates him for ignoring these requests. At the same time, she reveals that ever since she’d died and was brought back to life, she hadn’t been able to feel pain. Before telling Otto Louise’s second name, she cheekily shares one of her poems. Otto’s ambles meanwhile, take him more directly into the relationship his has with the person he’s been talking to in his head; it is apparent that Marley’s case was to become essential to this relationship, and that all the while, he’s been rehearsing how to engage with this person about how he came to be the way he is.…
In this letter, Marley thanks the Lord that Otto has finally become her solicitor. She starts by letting him know who her former solicitors were, so he can obtain her papers. Lingering on the beach, with the sounds of a merry-go-round in the distance, Otto continues with his retrospective of the evidence ranged against Marley. He recalls how he’d spent one afternoon, after taking her on as a client, drafting the definitive letter informing her of the hopeless of her case, when he suddenly began to see things differently. All the while, he wants the person he’s talking to in his head to know, that he’d been seeing things differently, ever since he was attacked on a beach and left for dead.…
Marley prays for the strength to tell Otto all she knows. She laments the fact that she made a vow not to use foul language; she could have made use of a few choice words. In this letter she manages (more or less) without them, as she recounts, from her point of view, what happened on the last day of Charlotte’s life. Still walking along a beach, Otto is thinking about a day in 2016, when he was left for dead. From her prison cell, Marley had been denying that she'd had anything to do with the murder of her sister. As Otto’s mind wanders to the most damning evidence against Marley, he reflects on the reasons why he finally decided to correspond with her.…
Marley writes a confessional letter explaining that her relationship with Charlotte was descending into alcoholism. On determining that Charlotte was mentally unwell, she tells how she followed her sister to London, only to be able to barge in on a clandestine meeting with Louise Gross. Otto's thoughts have taken him to the same juncture in the story. He recalls his conversation with Louise, long after the event, when she told him what happened when she met with a panicked Charlotte at a railway station. On the day he had that conversation with Louise, Otto was excited about meeting the person he's been talking to in his head all along.…
Marley continues with her version of how it came about that the twins should introduce her to Charlotte's family dressed the same, in scarlet frocks. She develops the theme of Charlotte's stalker, the tall man with a broken arm. In an aside, she formally requests that Otto release her from her vow never to use rude words. It is plain for his part, that Otto is addressing someone important, albeit in his own head. Taking a more birds-eye view of Charlotte's life, as he strolls along the beach, he goes over the account that Louise Gross gave him, about how she first found out about Marley.…
In this pivotal episode, Marley's letter covers the period immediately after she first meets her sister, when she spots the tall person lurking in the street, she comes to regard as 'the beanstalk with the broken arm'. She doesn't mention how she and Charlotte would soon be springing a surprise. Otto finds himself wandering along a beach. He too, is preoccupied with the twins' meeting, but his reflections are concentrated on a day soon after they got together, and the bombshell they had in store for Charlotte's family.…
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