Challenge: 50 Books discussion
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Question #49: Auditory Bliss/ Headache on Disk
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I have heard that the Harry Potter books are really good reads (listens lol) on audiobooks. I, myself, have not actually listened to any audiobooks. There is a feature on my Kindle that allows for that but I have not yet played with it.

I think the actors and the way the book is done (music, etc) can make or break an audiobook. I recently listened to Dune by Frank Herbert, and Audible's version was SO crazily done- a full cast in random chapters, followed by huge chunks of the narrator doing the voices; crazy music, coming in at unexpected/unnecessary times- that it made me really dislike the book. On the other hand, I'm currently listening to Water for Elephants and because it's done so well, I'm really enjoying it. It's a shame there's no clear way to discern how good an audio version of a book is, as it can leave you hating a book that you may otherwise have loved (well, maybe not to that extreme, but you get my drift!).

My favorite audio series is the Dave Robicheaux series by James Lee Burke. Will Patten is perfect as Dave. One of the books was narrated by someone else, and I didn't enjoy it at all. I have also read many of them before in "real book" form, and like the audio books better. The beauty of Burke's writing comes through well when spoken by a good narrator.
I split my reading about equally between audio books, print books, and my Kindle, and enjoy all three formats equally. I sometimes cannot remember later in which form I read a book, and think all the controversy about which one "counts" is pretty silly.
Too bad I just read Water for Elephants. Keep the recommendations coming - I need to update my library wait list with audiobooks to fuel the new commute :)
Faye wrote: "Because the general thread "Do AudioBooks Count?" has been by far the most popular thread in this group's recent history, effective April 1, 2011,* the 50 Books group will be changing it's focus ex..."
OMG you totally got me. I was all worked up to give a nasty response along the lines of "WHAT? I've been READING all these books and now everyone else will be listening?" LOL, I must be so gullible. Well played.
OMG you totally got me. I was all worked up to give a nasty response along the lines of "WHAT? I've been READING all these books and now everyone else will be listening?" LOL, I must be so gullible. Well played.
Lindsey wrote: "OMG you totally got me. I was all worked up to give a nasty respons ..."
Oh goody! Thanks for telling me. I was hoping I'd gotten someone fooled for a minute, at least. I've updated the initial posting in this thread to the one I wrote before I got the idea to try and trick some people into thinking this group was going exclusively to audio-books starting April Fool's Day.
Oh goody! Thanks for telling me. I was hoping I'd gotten someone fooled for a minute, at least. I've updated the initial posting in this thread to the one I wrote before I got the idea to try and trick some people into thinking this group was going exclusively to audio-books starting April Fool's Day.

The good:
I agree, the audio of Water for Elephants was fantastic-loved it. I'm currently listening to Faithful Place by Tana French which is narrated by Tim Gerard Reynolds and it's fabulous. The guy's brogue is perfect, I am in love. This is my third Tana French audio in a row and they've all been great. Faithful Place and The Likeness have been my favorites but In the Woods was great too. I also loved the audio of The Time Traveler's Wife. I think the guy who narrates for Henry is the same one who does young Jacob in Water for Elephants.
The audio of Everything Is Illuminated and Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close were great too but given the way Jonathan Safran Foer uses a lot of visuals in his books I would recommend also reading through parts of the actual books because you definitely miss things with just the audio.
The bad:
I tried to listen to The Golden Compass and it made me insane. There were multiple narrators (more than 20) and it made the thing way too hard to follow. I listened to an audio of Choke by Chuck Palahniuk which he read himself and it was not good. His phrasing was really weird and he ended a lot of his sentences like a question. A lot of times things read by the author are better but not this time. The woman who narrated Cordelia's parts in Love Walked In annoyed the hell out of me and really influenced my feelings about the book. I think if I had read that one instead of listed I would have liked it a lot more.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Hunger Games (other topics)The Time Traveler's Wife (other topics)
Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (other topics)
Water for Elephants (other topics)
The Golden Compass (other topics)
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That all said, I have just started a job with a somewhat ugly commute and I am relying on audioooks to keep me entertained. I recently heard The Elegance of the Hedgehog read by Barbara Rosenblat and Cassandra Morris and it was fantastic! It was like having an ultra interesting story-telling passenger from far away. I loved the authentic Parisian pronunciation of the french words.
I also recently borrowed the audio version of The Postmistress read by Orlagh Cassidy. I don't know if it was the book and the reader or just the reader, but it seemed excruciatingly dull and didn't make it passed disk 1.
My goodreads pal Heather was impressed with Andrea Levy's reading of Small Island and Stephanie recently extolled Khaled Hosseini's reading of The Kite Runner. In both instances, these are the authors reading their own works and lending authenticity with accents.
Perhaps obviously, I'd say the voice artist (?) of any audiobook has a tremendous impact of the recording's entertainment value.
So, the questions are: What audiobooks do you think shine in the format? Which ones would you nominate as a waste of disk space?