Audiobooks discussion

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A book I want to read but the narrator is ruining it
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✨Susan✨
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May 21, 2014 05:30PM

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I'm totally curious. What book...and who was reading it?


and its narrated by Scott Brick (per audible) - so the bad narrator comments intrigue me, since he was/is well known


I now check reviews before I'll purchase one.

and its narrated by Scott Brick (per audible) - so the bad narrator comments intrigue me, since he was/is well known"
He is so loved by many and I have listened to him on other books with no problem that is why I did not preview first. Audible always refunds. Getting it on kindle or paperback.

and its narrated by Scott Brick (per audible) - so the bad narrator comments intrigue me, since he was/is well known"
He is so loved by..."
A book I listened to The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America was narrated by Scott Brick also. While I really liked his narration it seemed improved by increasing the speed to 1.25. Just a thought. :o)

and its narrated by Scott Brick (per audible) - so the bad narrator comments intrigue me, since he was/is well known"
He ..."
I forgot he narrated The Devil in the White City. I listened to him narrate another nonfiction, Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith, on 2x speed, and I too thought he was fine.

Yeah, while I loved Devil in the White City, some parts seemed to drag, both because of the narration and because of the sheer volume of the description of minutiae in some parts. All in all, though, it was awesome.

I agree. That is the only book I have ever sent back to Audible. They gave me a different audiobook with no questions asked.


Right now I'm listening to him narrate Helter Skelter. So far I've only heard him narrate non-fiction, and I think he's fine. It might be his fiction narration for which people have a problem?




Could some of the discomfort with his voice be caused by medication he's taking or changes to the sound of his voice? Or did he sound exactly the same before his diagnosis?

I've only found a couple of audiobooks that were narrated poorly enough to make me quit. It usually has to be a combination of bad book & bad narrator. The closest I ever came to quitting a good book was Casey Affleck's narration of Sex on the Moon, but the story intrigued me enough to muscle through.

Usually if the author narrates his own book its dreadful

I've definitely experienced authors who are effective narrators. Obviously for nonfiction, folks like David Sedaris, Tina Fey and Rob Lowe, who are also entertainers, are a delight to listen to. I also thought Barbara Kingsolver and Toni Morrison did admirable jobs when I heard them. In fact, I can't imagine anyone capturing Beloved as the author intended but the author herself.
But this is obviously not always the case. I love Bill Bryson's books, but I can't listen to his voice...nails on the chalk board.

Kristie wrote: "Jayme wrote: "Usually if the author narrates his own book its dreadful"
I've definitely experienced authors who are effective narrators. Obviously for nonfiction, folks like David Sedaris, Tina Fe..."
haven't listened to any books by those you listed, will have to give it a shot. thanks! :)
I've definitely experienced authors who are effective narrators. Obviously for nonfiction, folks like David Sedaris, Tina Fe..."
haven't listened to any books by those you listed, will have to give it a shot. thanks! :)

I can see where some might find Sedaris' voice grating, but I think it adds to the character of his writing. I can't imagine anyone else narrating his books.
Sarah Vowell's voice is another one I have to take in small doses. A whole book of it is a LOT for me.

An exception to this would be Joshilyn Jackson. She did an outstanding job on A Grown-Up Kind of Pretty.

I've definitely experienced authors who are effective narrators. Obviously for nonfiction, folks like David ..."
Good luck! FYI, the Barbara Kingsolver book I heard her narrate was Flight Behavior. I thought she was good, though I don't think it took a lot of "range" for a narrator to do that book.
If you haven't listened to Bossypants I highly recommend it. Laugh out loud funny.
Jan wrote: "Jayme wrote: "Usually if the author narrates his own book its dreadful"
An exception to this would be Joshilyn Jackson. She did an outstanding job on [book:A Grown-Up Kind of Pretty..."
Nice!! thanks for the suggestion! I can see that maybe I lumped all authors into the crappy narration barrel too soon. :D
An exception to this would be Joshilyn Jackson. She did an outstanding job on [book:A Grown-Up Kind of Pretty..."
Nice!! thanks for the suggestion! I can see that maybe I lumped all authors into the crappy narration barrel too soon. :D
I HIGHLY recommend A Grown-Up Kind of Pretty.
Jennifer (Feedback's just another word for we don't give a damn) wrote: "I HIGHLY recommend A Grown-Up Kind of Pretty."
Put it on my to read! thanks!
Put it on my to read! thanks!

On the other hand, Raul Esparza did a great job with Stephen King's "Under the Dome" (listening to that huge tome is a lot easier than hauling the print version around!), and Craig Wasson was fantastic reading "11/22/63" by King.

I agree. I felt like a teacher was reading the book to her class. It should have been Katniss telling her story.


I had to return the book after listening for 10 minutes to Geraldine Hughes reading TransAtlantic by Colum McCann, she seemed so overly dramatic and over pronouncing every word, that it drove me nuts!

What bothers me the most is the male narrators who try to give the females in the book some high-pitched lilting fairy-like voice. That, for me is the worst. Other than that- I can deal with the narrator, it's generally just the book itself that may rub me the wrong way.

I noticed in Jackson's bio that she has a theatre background. That most likely gave her the skills she needs to narrate well. Might be something to check on before buying if you're unsure about an author read.


She's up there with Sedaris and Bryson in the "I'll read a print copy" category.

and its narrated by Scott Brick (per audible) - so the bad narrator comments intrigue me, since he was/is well known"
Miracle Cure by Harlen Coben (read by Scott Brick) is only my second audio book. I feel like I'm part of the club now....not often I get in on the joke this early. :).
Brick was fine for the male voices, but his females sounded like breathless bimbos....which was okay for one character, but not for the young investigative reporter. I was thankful to have picked up the abridged version.
Can't place all the blame on Brick, Coben has a note inside the print version warning readers to pass on this, his first work, unless you are already familiar with his work.
On a positive note, I think Brick would be good with other works. His voice has an uppercrust, British-like demeanor to it. I could see him doing nonfiction well.

and its narrated by Scott Brick (per audible) - so the bad narrator comments intrigue me, since he was/is well known"
Miracle Cure by H..."
Brick does do non-fiction very well. I think I've listened to 3 non-fiction books narrated by them, and all were well done.

and its narrated by Scott Brick (per audible) - so the bad narrator comments intrigue me, since he was/is well known"
Miracle Cure by H..."
I found Brick's female Fikry voices were well done.

An amateurish, unskilled narrator will make even a great book's audio format boring and a total waste of listening time.
A great author is not necessarily qualified to narrate the audio format of their work.

Books mentioned in this topic
Room at the Inn (other topics)Attachments (other topics)
The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry (other topics)
The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry (other topics)
The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Joshilyn Jackson (other topics)Joshilyn Jackson (other topics)