Funny you should ask—I actually emailed the publisher last year about this! Scarborough Press told me they haven't licensed audio rights yet, which bums me out because the book's atmospheric tension would thrive in narration. Imagine a gravelly-voiced narrator describing those frozen Michigan highways where the killer prowled... chills.
In the meantime, I'd recommend pairing the book with the 'Felon' podcast's Ypsilanti episodes for an immersive experience. Sometimes waiting for an audiobook leads you to cooler discoveries anyway—I stumbled on vintage news clips about the case while searching.
Man, I was just digging into this the other day! 'Terror in Ypsilanti' by Tom Carr is one of those true crime deep dives that sticks with you. I checked Audible and a few other audiobook platforms, but it doesn't seem to have an official audio version yet.
That said, I've found that some niche true crime titles like this eventually get picked up by smaller publishers or even indie narrators. It might be worth setting a Google Alert or checking back in a few months—sometimes these things fly under the radar until a podcast mentions them and suddenly boom, audiobook release. For now, though, the physical copy or eBook might be your best bet if you're craving that eerie Michigan killer story.
As a librarian who fields this question a lot: no audiobook exists at the moment, but let me nerd out about why that's interesting. 'Terror in Ypsilanti' covers such a specific regional case (the Oakland County Child Killer) that it probably hasn't hit the demand threshold for audio production. True crime audiobooks usually need crossover appeal—think 'I'll Be Gone in the dark'—but Carr's book is more granular. The silver lining? The author's detailed research makes it perfect for slow reading, highlighting passages about those 1970s investigative blind spots.
Checked my usual audiobook haunts (Libro.fm, Chirp, even Hoopla) and nada. What's wild is how this contrasts with today's true crime market—you'd think every deep-cut case would get the audio treatment. Maybe it's the dense historical context that makes adaptation tricky? Either way, the paperback's worth it just for the eerie photos alone.
2025-12-16 03:14:35
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