Steve Levi has 5 audiobooks on Listento.it, narrated by 4 narrators. The most-rated is La Touche.

A comedy of errors when four octogenarian Egyptology docents steal a mummy which has no value to find artifacts they know do not exist and are mistaken for a band of professional art thieves.
©2018 Steven Levi (P)2019 Steven Levi

Captain Heinz Noonan, master of the impossible crime, is called upon to solve the most puzzling of riddles. If it's odd, you call Noonan. Why, for instance, would someone steal 200 garden gnomes and then leave them in a pattern across a city? Better yet, how can air cargo increase in weight as it flies and how can a century old Tong high-binder warrior appear in a locked warehouse and then disappear in a cloud of smoke? And why would anyone want to steal anything from a garbage dump? See if you can solve these unusual mysteries faster than the “bearded Holmes” of the Sandersonville police department. Oh, then there is the theft of 8,000 gallons of water, a reappearing coelacanth, the theft of some Komodo dragon trousers and, of course, a missing duct tape tuxedo. The perfect who dun what for your bookshelf and enjoyment.
©2019 Steve Levi (P)2019 Steve Levi

Judge Xenophon and the Foxworthy Cabal is a literary snapshot of an Alaska Gold Rush boomtown in August of 1900. The boomtown, Ophir, is on the edge of either going civilized or ghost. To become civilized, it needs to legally squeeze out the crooked judge before he absconds on the last steamship of the season - in 30 days - with the gold he has been legally seizing since June. Told in 50 first-person vignettes, the novel is the epitome of small-town America where there are no secrets, and everyone knows everything about everybody. The author, Steven Levi, is an Alaska Gold Rush scholar and fiction writer. He has more than 80 books in print and on Kindle including the only composite history of the Alaska Gold Rush, Boom and Bust in the Alaska Gold Fields, and a footnoted The Human Face of the Alaska Gold Rush.
©2018 Steven Levi (P)2019 Steven Levi

As you are reading this, banks are giving away millions of your dollars in gift mortgages. The banks are borrowing money from the federal government for mortgages, claiming the loans have "gone bad", and then giving the title of the property to deserving individuals. There is no federal check on these "bad loans", so the mortgages are free and clear - and tax-free. A Writ of Mandamus filed by the author in August of 2017 may end this practice. Beating Banks at Their Own Game is a fictional approach to explaining how the process works. The appendix includes a collection of nonfiction documents sent by the author to the FBI, SEC, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and the Federal Housing Finance Administration to stop the practice of gift mortgages. Beating Banks at Their Own Game is the saga of five people who use occupational and real-life experience in banking and real estate to seize control of more than 120 lots in a six-block area in Las Vegas using money that does not exist. They slide the land titles into a shell corporation and then sell out to a development corporation for 75 percent of book value. By selling below market value, they know the sale will go quickly and quietly. But can they get the land and sell it before their scam is uncovered by greedy competitors, who want in on the action, state banking auditors, the IRS and the SEC.
©2018 Steve Levi (P)2020 Steve Levi

No one knew where Old Man Peterson got his gold, but there was a lot of it. Everyone wanted a share and was willing to kill to get it.
©2008 Steven Levi (P)2019 Steven Levi