Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ

Audiobooks discussion

note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
232 views
Archives > Spring 2012

Comments Showing 51-100 of 633 (633 new)    post a comment »

message 51: by Fran (new)

Fran Wilkins | 796 comments Janet wrote: "I got a kick out of The Geography of Bliss: One Grump's Search for the Happiest Places in the World...perfect for when you need a light, amusing read.
I'm struggling with The B..."</i>

I read[book:The Book Thief
and would reread passages because they were so cleverly written. Try reading it and see, I hope you will be more than pleasantly surprised.



message 52: by SheriC (new)

SheriC (shericpm) Bxrlover wrote: "Couldn't take one more minute of this one. Waaaaaaaaaaaay too academic and dry for my liking. If it appeals to anyone other than scientists I would be surprised (I am a big Bryson fan AND an RN who is fascinated by science!!). Oh well.

I tried this one and gave up on it, too. I suspect it was a much more interesting read in traditional format than on audio.


message 53: by Mejix (new)

Mejix | 112 comments Working on Black Swan Green. The slang was a bit difficult at the beginning but now I am enjoying it.


message 54: by Jeanie (new)

Jeanie | 4024 comments I'm re-listening to the seven books in the Chief Inspector Gamache/Three Pines Mysteries by Louise Penny. It isn't often that a mystery is as good the second time when listenned to back to back immediately after the first listen, but all of these are. I had to re-listen, I didn't want to leave Three Pines! The narrator is perfect for Gamache's old-world persona and Louise Penny's prose is stunning, charming, funny, and even poetic.


message 55: by John, Moderator (new)

John | 3882 comments I'm listening to Wanda McCaddon (a/k/a Nadia May) read The Secret Scripture, having to pay careful attention as the protagonist's Irish accent is rather heavy.


message 56: by Julie C (new)

Julie C (goldwinger) | 81 comments Hi

I use EBSCOhost a lot but It seems to be unavailable to me today.

Is anyone else having a problem once logged in.


message 57: by John, Moderator (last edited Apr 03, 2012 11:34AM) (new)

John | 3882 comments Xe: It really should have gone in the Promotions folder - the quarterly threads are intended for discussing what folks are currently reading. There's no way to drag and drop items there, so we'll leave this alone ... and now you know.

John


message 58: by Ancestral (new)

Ancestral Gaidheal (gaidheal) | 108 comments Bxrlover wrote: "Started A Short History of Nearly Everything and the jury is still out. I didn't expect it to be so scientific ( despite the blatantly obvious description and cover graphic...)."

I'm listening to his At Home: A Short History of Private Life and it seems to go off in tagents regularly, almost leaving domestic life behind completely. At least I don't find his narration of his own books off-putting as so many seem to do.


message 59: by Xe (new)

Xe Sands (xesands) | 360 comments John wrote: "Xe: It really should have gone in the Promotions folder - the quarterly threads are intended for discussing what folks are currently reading. There's no way to drag and drop items there, so we'll l..."

So sorry, John - thanks for letting me know. I'll copy and past it over there instead and delete it from here. Should I make it it's own thread?


message 60: by John, Moderator (new)

John | 3882 comments Yes, a thread for each specific offer as they come along - thanks!


message 61: by Xe (new)

Xe Sands (xesands) | 360 comments John wrote: "Yes, a thread for each specific offer as they come along - thanks!"

Done! Thanks, John :)


message 62: by MissSusie (new)

MissSusie | 2400 comments Oh my gosh I did not want to get out of my car at all this week I went to a conference and wish I could have driven for 2 more hours to finish A Grown-Up Kind of Pretty: A Novelby, Joshilyn Jackson narrated very well by the author and it is really good!!!!


message 63: by Kelly (new)

Kelly | 295 comments I finished The Geography of Bliss yesterday. I enjoyed it, even liked the author narrating it. Towards the end he says that long work commutes contribute to unhappiness and that made me chuckle. I look forward to mine because that's more reading time! I'm sure many of us in this group can relate.

Now I am listening to Catching Fire.


message 64: by Shirley (new)

Shirley (shirleythekindlereader) | 493 comments Finished


204 Rosewood Lane

Started

The Hunger Games

read hard cover but want to listen to the audible version before the movie becomes available on VUDU.


message 65: by Bxrlover (last edited Apr 04, 2012 07:39AM) (new)

Bxrlover | 109 comments Ancestral wrote: "Bxrlover wrote: "Started A Short History of Nearly Everything and the jury is still out. I didn't expect it to be so scientific ( despite the blatantly obvious description and cover graph..."

Despite the tangents I enjoyed At Home: A Short History of Private Life. I think Bryson is the perfect narrator for his books with his dry wit and melifluous voice.

By far however, In a Sunburned Country is his best novel in my humble opinion.


message 66: by Ancestral (new)

Ancestral Gaidheal (gaidheal) | 108 comments Bxrlover wrote: "By far however, In a Sunburned Country is his best novel in my humble opinion. ..."

Is this the same as Down Under , because I like that one best, too. So much so, I sent a copy back to my Dad in Australia to read; and one to my grandmother, and one to my mother, my aunt, and so on.


message 67: by John, Moderator (last edited Apr 04, 2012 06:31PM) (new)

John | 3882 comments Kelly wrote: "I finished The Geography of Bliss yesterday. I enjoyed it, even liked the author narrating it. Towards the end he says that long work commutes contribute to unhappiness and that made me chuckle. ..."

If you liked it, then you'd probably like Weiner's new one Man Seeks God: My Flirtations with the Divine, too.

Re: Bryson ... yes, those are the same Australian (themed) book, just different titles.


message 68: by Barbara (new)

Barbara I'm still in Siberia with Ian Frazier,Travels in Siberia. He's the narrator too and is not terribly good at it, but that's okay. I love the book.


message 69: by John, Moderator (new)

John | 3882 comments Barbara - I didn't care for his narration much myself, until at least halfway through the book, if not further on.


message 70: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie | 1529 comments I can highly recommend the short audio book; When the Emperor Was Divine.

My review:

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...


message 71: by Kelly (new)

Kelly | 295 comments John wrote: "Kelly wrote: "I finished The Geography of Bliss yesterday. I enjoyed it, even liked the author narrating it. Towards the end he says that long work commutes contribute to unhappiness and that mad..."

I will have to check that book out, thanks for the recommendation.


message 72: by Janet (new)

Janet (justjanet) | 337 comments Kelly wrote: "I finished The Geography of Bliss yesterday. I enjoyed it, even liked the author narrating it. Towards the end he says that long work commutes contribute to unhappiness and that made me chuckle. ..."

Ditto Kelly. I find myself looking for reasons to drive more...lol.


message 73: by Shelli (new)

Shelli | 66 comments Mejix wrote: "Working on Black Swan Green. The slang was a bit difficult at the beginning but now I am enjoying it."

I really enjoyed this.


message 74: by Fran (new)

Fran Wilkins | 796 comments John wrote: "Barbara - I didn't care for his narration much myself, until at least halfway through the book, if not further on."

I've finished Travels in Siberia and enjoyed it for the most part. What is nice about Russian history is that it really is only about 250 years unlike China! I didn't mind Frazier as the narrator. Ironically I met a woman who teaches at the University of Yakut last week and another woman whose father was exiled to Siberia for 10 years! Both in the same day. And the university professor was a beautiful as Frazier described the women to be. She also described herself as being from Siberia, which is a concept as Frazier states, not a country. Thanks for the recommendation!


message 75: by MissSusie (new)

MissSusie | 2400 comments Finished A Grown-Up Kind of Pretty: A Novel written and narrated by, Joshilyn Jackson she is definitely the exception to the rule her narration was fantastic the book is told by 3 different POV's and each were distinct voices so you knew exactly who was speaking. you may be able to tell I loved this book 5 stars all the way!

I am now re-reading The Weird Sisters by Eleanor Brown narrated by, Kirsten Potter I read it in print last year but we are reading it for book club and wanted to refresh my memory so thought I'd give the audio a try as Kirstin Potter is always a good narrator.


message 76: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie | 1529 comments John and Fran, I have put Travels in Siberia on my Audible wishlist. Thanks for bringing it to my attention.


message 77: by John, Moderator (new)

John | 3882 comments PLEASE bear in mind that it took a while for me to get into the book!


message 78: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie | 1529 comments John, I listened to the sample and loved the interesting facts. I needed the slowness to think through what was being said. I am a maniac with the 30 second rewind.

And it is my own fault if I don't end up liking it. i chose to put it there.


message 79: by Bxrlover (new)

Bxrlover | 109 comments I have been a big fan of Anita Diamant, but Good Harbor is proving a little mind numbing for me.


message 80: by Wendy T (new)

Wendy T | 0 comments Last night I finished In the Bleak Midwinter by Julia Spencer-Fleming. I really enjoyed this suspense novel and look forward to continuing with the series. I gave this book 4 stars.

Today I started listening to Paper Towns by John Green and I started reading Take This Regret by Amy Lichtenhan


message 81: by Susan (new)

Susan (chlokara) Wendy T wrote: "Last night I finished In the Bleak Midwinter by Julia Spencer-Fleming. I really enjoyed this suspense novel and look forward to continuing with the series. I gave this ..."

Wendy, I just have to say that I love your avatar.


message 82: by Janice (new)

Janice | 0 comments I started Unbroken: A World War II Story Of Survival, Resilience, And Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand a few days ago, and at first it was slow, for me. But now I am really getting into it, and can't wait to get back when I have to stop to do other things. Edward Herrmann is the narrator, and does a good job.


message 83: by Heidi (new)

Heidi | 1546 comments Nearly done with Bury Your Dead Bury Your Dead (Armand Gamache, #6) by Louise Penny up next is F is for Fugitive F is for Fugitive (Kinsey Millhone, #6) by Sue Grafton - also listening to Life of Pi Life of Pi by Yann Martel


message 84: by John, Moderator (new)

John | 3882 comments I'm a big fan of Sue Grafton on audio; as I recall, they change narrators partway through, though both are pretty good.


message 85: by Heidi (new)

Heidi | 1546 comments I like the narrator for A-F (same one so far). I don't like when they change narrators up but normally I can get used to it. With mysteries (Agatha Raisin, Stephanie Plum, Goldy Bear) they have so many books in each series I am guessing it difficult to keep the same narrator.


message 86: by John, Moderator (new)

John | 3882 comments Being an old geezer, I fondly recall the narrator of the Agatha Raisin books, Penelope Keith, from her British Comedies of a generation ago (or more!): The "Good Neighbours" ("Good Life", UK), "To the Manor Born", etc.


message 87: by Fran (new)

Fran Wilkins | 796 comments Janice wrote: "I started Unbroken: A World War II Story Of Survival, Resilience, And Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand a few days ago, and at first it was slow, for me. But now I am r..."

This is on my TBR list. I'm not sure whether I want it in print or audio, so I'll be interested in your perspective.


message 88: by Javasapien (last edited Apr 08, 2012 05:40PM) (new)

Javasapien | 272 comments Fran wrote: This is on my TBR list. I'm not sure whether I want it in print or audio, so I'll be interested in your perspective. ..."

I recently listened to this (Unbroken) and thought Edward Hermann's narration was outstanding.


message 89: by Frances (new)

Frances (shibagirl) | 151 comments ok my latest update ....

Devil May Care...it was ok, once I got into it. gave 3 stars

One for the Moneynot been impressed by the previous Janet Evanovichbook I tried , but I quite enjoyed this one...(would have like to have given it 3½ stars)

House RulesJodi does it again ....I loved it (It did have one unbelievable and irritating flaw to my mind,but I wont spoil the plot for you ) gave 4 stars

The Forgotten Garden...loved the way the mystery slowly got revealed throughout the whole book....4 stars

I've started Dark Matter..I'm strugling to get into it .....it may just be due to the fact that I have had lots of short listening periods...

but I really love books that grip you right from the start


message 90: by Susan (new)

Susan (chlokara) Javasapien wrote: "Fran wrote: This is on my TBR list. I'm not sure whether I want it in print or audio, so I'll be interested in your perspective. ..."

I recently listened to this (Unbroken) and thought Edward Her..."


I agree, it was a great narration. Also, there were parts of this book that were upsetting to me and hard to get through. I find it easier to listen than to actually read through such sections.


message 91: by Heidi (new)

Heidi | 1546 comments Frances I think the earliest Stephanie Plum books are the best.


message 92: by Ancestral (last edited Apr 09, 2012 01:53PM) (new)

Ancestral Gaidheal (gaidheal) | 108 comments Have just started in on Peter May's " The Lewis Man ".


message 93: by Carolyn F. (new)

Carolyn F. Listened to a bunch of short stories in the The Hound of Death, not my favorites. The narrator was great though, the stores too morbid for Christie, more like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

I'm listening to Discord's Apple on my MP3 and the cassettes of To Die For.


message 94: by Janice (new)

Janice | 0 comments Javasapien wrote: "Fran wrote: This is on my TBR list. I'm not sure whether I want it in print or audio, so I'll be interested in your perspective. ..."

I recently listened to this (Unbroken) and thought Edward Her..."


Fran wrote: "Janice wrote: "I started Unbroken: A World War II Story Of Survival, Resilience, And Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand a few days ago, and at first it was slow, for me. ..."

I agree, Edward Herrmann's narration is indeed outstanding. I have been both reading the text format, and listening to the audio version. I am amazed once again at how much I miss, and then pick up on, when I switch formats. I am really liking getting to have both. I really do like the print version, due to the pictures, and even a graph of the plane that shows where each different crew member would be during bombing raids. And as previously stated, the narrative version is great!


message 95: by Karen (new)

Karen White (karenwhiteaudiobooknarrator) | 175 comments Thought y'all might like to see this post that the wonderful book blogger "Literate Housewife" has compiled of Favorite Narrators (who aren't on Audible's "A" list of Celebrity Narrators). Men will follow.
She's looking for votes, so let her know who you love. (I'm at the bottom cuz it's alphabetical, not for any other reason, I'm sure :)



p.s. She writes lots of great audiobook reviews and leads fun challenges as well.


message 96: by John, Moderator (new)

John | 3882 comments I'd have a tough time narrowing that list down to five.


message 97: by Chris (last edited Apr 11, 2012 08:08AM) (new)

Chris Stanley (christinelstanley) Julie C wrote: "Hi

I use EBSCOhost a lot but It seems to be unavailable to me today.

Is anyone else having a problem once logged in."


Hi Julie, if you are using EBSCOhost via your county library, I believe the service has been transfered to Oneclickdigital in many areas. I can't get the software to work though, I get as far as checkout, but the book doesn't download properly. I have a open helpdesk query, but no response yet. Maybe this has happened in your area too.


message 98: by Janice (new)

Janice | 0 comments Fran wrote: "Janice wrote: "I started Unbroken: A World War II Story Of Survival, Resilience, And Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand a few days ago, and at first it was slow, for me. ..."

Fran, if I had to choice one format only for Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience and RedemptionUnbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience and Redemption I think I would go with the text version. It has been helpful to be able to go back and look up things I missed or didn't remember. And the pictures and plane diagram enhance the story. That being said, when I first started reading, it was slow going. Then I started the audio version, and got quickly engaged in the story, and have been hooked into it since. It has been great to have both formats, and I should probably do this more often, but is too time consuming for me to do on a regular basis.


message 99: by Susan (new)

Susan (chlokara) Just finished Destiny of the Republic: A Tale of Madness, Medicine and the Murder of a President by Candice Millard. Excellent book, fine narration. Non-fiction focuses on James Garfield, the man and the president, his assassination and death, and how the times contributed to his death. Very interesting.


message 100: by Janet (new)

Janet (justjanet) | 337 comments @ Karen, thanks for the link. I'll be sure to look for audiobooks narrated by some of these that are new to me.


back to top
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.