Audiobooks discussion
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Current Reads 2024
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March
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Feb 29, 2024 05:14PM

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next on the pile is The Big Over Easy

Today I am continuing the Iron Druid Chronicles by Kevin Hearne with Tricked (book 4). These are read by Luke Daniels. Relatively short, and urban fantasy about an ancient druid living in modern day Arizona running from supernatural creatures and the old gods.


Started March with The Great Divide by Cristina Henríquez. It's about the building of the Panama Canal. I've only just begun, but it's focus is on several different people that are involved in the construction.

this is on my list - i'll be interested to hear your thoughts

A complementary read to Carter’s story. Baier leads the reader to Reagan’s speech at Moscow University, the climax of his political negotiation with the USSR and thus marking the impending end of the Cold War a year later.



Now I am back to Earth and continuing with Greece and Rome: An Integrated History of the Ancient Mediterranean with Professor Garland.
I have also started Earth Abides by George R. Stewart, written in 1949 about a pandemic that kills most humans and leaves one lonely guy to figure out how to live the rest of his life.




Hild is long and dense but wonderful. It is historical and yet it could just as well be fantasy. The author has to do "worldbuilding" and introduce ways of thinking very different from ours.

I'm delighted to hear good news about the audio book as I'm very interested in listening to it, and to the second book in the series, Menewood.

Madness: Race and Insanity in a Jim Crow Asylum
Whispers Underground
and
The Blood of Emmett Till
and I'm currently listening to:
The Devil's Half Acre: The Untold Story of How One Woman Liberated the South's Most Notorious Slave Jail
and
Nature's Wild Ideas: How the Natural World Is Inspiring Scientific Innovation

Madness: Race and Insanity in a Jim Crow Asylum
Whispers Underground
and
[book:The B..."
I read the Blood of Emmett Till several years ago and thought it was excellent.

Also, I was pretty surprised that the author got the year of the Tulsa massacre wrong. He stated 1922, but it was 1921.

...I did miss that! Wild."
To be fair, I was listening to this AFTER the hundred year anniversary of the massacre, plus several other books I've read recently have mentioned it, so it was pretty top of mind for me to easily spot the error. I likely wouldn't have caught it if not for those factors!

I did read it in print. I hope it's not hard to keep all the characters straight on audio.

Part memoir and part historical information on the region, its people, and their conflicts that continue to ravage even today.


Now I think I’ll move on to The Bone Ships by R.J. Barker. Hopefully it won’t take me too long since I have two other books ready through Libby.

Next up is Dreaming of You - a period romance which I typically don't like on audio but will give it a shot (a friend shares my library card and it was on the shelf - saved me from having to figure out what to read next!)

Now on another first-person - Greyhound, which I have had for years. I chose this one & the previous one because a GR group I am in has a theme this month of Coming of Age. In this one, Sebastian, just turning 12, is sent alone by bus from California to Pennsylvania to live with his grandparents. It seems to be the 1990's when a Walkman is new technology. His single mom and her boyfriend can't be bothered with him, and when you see how they treat him, it's clear he's better off without them. On the trip, he meets a variety of people. The author's note at the beginning says this story is true with some elements fictionalized, and his bio says he lived in multiple states. So at least the emotional sense of it must reflect his own life. Nick Podehl is excellent at the narration.


A murder trial was the last thing Lincoln wanted to take on as there was talks at the time people wanting Lincoln to enter the political arena. Book appeals to those who enjoy the law, murder trials or true crime stories then this is worthy read.

Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives by Siddharth Kara | read by Peter Ganim
One of the most heartbreaking, incredibly sad book about cobalt mining in the Congo. Cobalt is the natural resource in the rechargeable lithium ion batteries for our phones, laptops, cars, and all everything battery operated. The devastation described exceeded my expectation.



Thanks for the report! I’m moving up the holds list!


Intense, gripping and suspenseful.




Nightmare fuel.

I'm still listening to Nature's Wild Ideas: How the Natural World Is Inspiring Scientific Innovation (on paper anyway).
I finished The Devil's Half Acre: The Untold Story of How One Woman Liberated the South's Most Notorious Slave Jail
DNF'ed Real Life,
And now I'm about 25% into The Woman They Could Not Silence: One Woman, Her Incredible Fight for Freedom, and the Men Who Tried to Make Her Disappear. So far... it is WILD.

I also finished Demon daughter, latest in the Penric and Desdemona series by Lois McMaster Bujold. I bought the Kindle version some time back and listened to it read by Alexa. The human narration is so much more satisfying!


WILD. Just, completely wild.


Without Fail (#6 in Jack Reacher series) is next for me.


After their defeat in WWII, three women find themselves sharing an old castle while they try to rebuild their lives and as they struggle to confront their choices and behaviors before, during and after the war. A fresh and interesting perspective that I haven’t previously seen written about within this historical setting.


Now starting The Truth about the Devlins by, Lisa Scottoline narrated by, Edoardo Ballerini releases March 26th
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