A Game of Blind grips from the first line — not with noise, but with stillness. Not with blood, but with tension.
It’s a psychological chess thriller where every word is a move, every pause a trap, every emotion a sacrifice.
A place where love forces its way through the dark, and loneliness becomes its own kind of music.
You don’t read this story — you follow it. Through silence. Through weight. Through a narrow corridor of doubt, hope, and memory.
And in the audiobook version, that path is voiced with quiet power by Cutler Hollist.
He lives in Utah, among tall pines and high, watchful mountains — and somewhere between dusk and night, stories begin to speak through him. He’s married to the quiet, and you can hear it in every word.
Cutler grew up reading aloud to his family during long drives from Georgia to Utah each Christmas. That rhythm — road, voice, silence — shaped something in him.
He later earned a degree in psychology from the University of Utah, and instead of walking into an office, he stepped behind the mic. That background in psychology gave him a feel for what lies beneath the words — tension, hesitation, longing — all the things that can’t be spoken directly, but must still be heard.
He doesn’t perform. He doesn’t overstate. He listens. And that makes all the difference.
His narration doesn’t compete with the story — it follows its breath.
So when the world of A Game of Blind begins to close in, it’s his calm, deliberate voice that guides you through.
Are you ready to play?