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I also think books like Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close and Night Film would be missing something in audio, as well as the Thursday Next series by Jasper Fforde.


I actually liked the audiobook, Everything I Never Told You. What was it about the narration you disliked?

I didn't think Campbell put any feeling or emotion into her reading. It was very dry. She has a soothing voice, which is great, but didn't hold my attention. I don't want to feel like someone is reading to me. I would rather the book be - well, performed isn't exactly the right word, but there's just a quality some narrators possess that makes it seem they are telling you a story rather than simply reading aloud. Campbell, in this book, didn't have that.




I only listened to a few of the books. I got most of them on sale as ebooks. I only switched to audio when I got to the point in the series where the ebooks were $9.99+. The Outlaw Demon Wails was the hardest one for me to get because it was too expensive in ebook and too old for me to justify the audio without it being on sale. I ended up getting it from the library. I wonder what the deal is with that book.
My choice for better in print is the entire Vatta's War series by Elizabeth Moon. It's a great series, but the narrator is truly awful. She so badly mispronounced so many words, I wanted to throw my iPod across the room. I read the third book, but listened to the rest. The one I read was much, much better. The only reason I listened to the rest of the series was that I wanted to know what happened next and didn't have the time to devote to reading the text.

It seems like the more complicated something is, the easier it is to do in print - you can read more slowly to understand concepts; stop and think about them; go back and re-read a section. I've noticed this even in fiction. When a story has a wealth of characters, locations, or dates, I want to turn back and check something, and can't in audio.

It was almost like he was trying to actually perform the book - and it just pulled me out of the book every time he changed voices.

I don't know if I would have liked the print book. Given it's popularity (the sequel to Eragon), I probably would have though it was at least okay. But I couldn't finish this one on audio. The way the narrator did the voices of the two main characters, it sounded like Obi Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor) talking to Cookie Monster. I'm not lying! I finished after the 1st disk; I just couldn't take it.

I don't know if I would have liked the print book. Given it's popularity (the sequel to Eragon), I probably would have though it was at least okay. But I couldn't fi..."
This is proof that sometimes it's a matter of taste. Personally, I really enjoyed the first two books in the Inheritance Cycle, both for the story and the narration. I thoroughly enjoyed Gerard Doyle's vocal performance. For the overwritten last two books in the series, it was Gerard Doyle's narration that pulled me through. The advantage of print for the last two books would be that the reader could skim over the over-extended parts.
Anyway, to each his/her own.

True! Good point.
Part of it was that I for some reason, I imagined the dragon having a strong female voice. I don't know if that was from reading Eragon, or seeing the movie.

The way the narrator did the voices of the two main characters, it sounded like Obi Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor) talking to Cookie Monster..."
*snort* That is the best description! I didn't mind his main voice, but his voices for the dragons were terrible! I always thought Saphira sounded like a chain smoker... and Glaedr was even worse!

Eyre Affair was good in audio but I like the voices I had in my head better. Percy Jackson is fantastic until you get to the last two books in the Heros of Olympus. Changed to a horrid, horrible narrator..so I bought 2 ebooks to finish it out. Kelley Armstrong Otherworld, loved the gal who did Bitten but then they switched to a nasal sounding lady who was just boring.

I agree with what Karen says about voices in my head. I think it makes a difference if you start a series one way. I listened to Crucible of Gold which is about the 6th of the series, when I had read all the others in print and I kept feeling like the voices were all wrong!

Anne Rice's Prince Lestat dragged a bit in audio, but the chapters I read in text just flew by. I think her writing style lends itself better to reading than to narration.
I should clarify that the narration of the book itself was fine.

So much of Fforde's cleverness is in his wordplay, though. He spells things creatively and that would be utterly lost in audio. The mispelling vyrus, for example. Or Jack Schitt's name. Then there are passages where the words are laid out visually. Or, in the fifth Thursday Next book, when she's in The Wasteland, there aren't any words at all. Just pictures.

Revenge Cafe

I'd have thought that would have been something caught by the producer or director! That's really bizarre...


I think I would be if the book was fiction and would rather read it or see the film.

Glad I read it in print then because I loved it.


I believe the only qualifications the narrator had was that she could nail a New York accent. Sadly, there was only one character in the title who even spoke with the accent, despite the setting being in NY. The part I am referring to was so small anyone could have muddled through it. The narration just made the lead seem so different from what I read of the title.
Also,

Dark Cravings
This title was re-written before Ellora's Cave picked it up and published it. The original title had already been put to an audible.

*Original edition* Blood Lust Rising
I still wanted the audible because I love the story. After sampling the audio, I serious opted out of purchasing it. I really do love this book but I actually hope they decide to redo/remake the audio for it.

"Mr Beach was too well bred to be inquisitive, but his eyebrows were not.
'Ah!' he said.
’?’, cried the eyebrows. ‘? ? ?’
Ashe ignored the eyebrows.
…
Mr Beach’s eyebrows were still mutely urging him to reveal all, but Ashe directed his gaze at that portion of the room which Mr Beach did not fill. He was hanged if he was going to let himself be hypnotized by a pair of eyebrows into incriminating himself.
Books mentioned in this topic
Blood Lust Rising (other topics)Love Left Behind (other topics)
Dark Cravings (other topics)
Finnikin of the Rock (other topics)
Revenge Cafe (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
P.G. Wodehouse (other topics)S.J. Rozan (other topics)
I'll start with S.J. Rozan's mysteries featuring Lydia Chin and Bill Smith. Narration ruined the latest one for me.