The Buffalo Hunter Hunter
Narrated by Shane Ghostkeeper, Marin Ireland, Owen Teale
Why You'll Love This
Jones builds his monster from Blackfoot mythology with such precision that by the end it doesn't feel like fiction — it feels like something that's been hunting you your whole life.
- Great if you want: Indigenous horror rooted in Blackfoot mythology with real menace
- The experience: slow and relentless — dread builds all the way through
- Narration: Ghostkeeper's voice carries cultural weight the story demands
- Skip if: you need fast plot momentum or a tidy resolution
About This Book
In the harsh winter landscape of the late 1800s American frontier, a mysterious figure stalks those who hunt buffalo for profit and sport. When a series of gruesome deaths plague hunting parties across the Great Plains, survivors whisper of an otherworldly predator that seems to understand their movements before they make them. A grizzled tracker finds himself caught between the dwindling herds and something far more dangerous than the elements, as the natural order reveals its own brutal justice. Jones weaves Indigenous folklore with visceral horror, creating a tale where the hunted become hunters in ways no one anticipates.
The multi-narrator approach elevates this atmospheric horror into something haunting and immersive. Shane Ghostkeeper brings gravitas to the frontier voices, while Marin Ireland's precise delivery captures the mounting dread that permeates each scene. Owen Teale rounds out the cast with his commanding presence, making every whispered legend feel immediate and threatening. The sprawling fifteen-hour runtime allows the tension to build naturally across the windswept plains, while the varied vocal performances distinguish between human desperation and something altogether more primal. The audio format amplifies every creaking saddle and distant howl into an unsettling symphony.