Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which ones didn’t you like?
The Fever by Megan Abbott
Before We Were Yours by Lisa Wingate
Look Alive Out There by Sloane Crosley
Some voices are grating. Try other narrators. You can listen to samples before buying.
Apples Never Fall
Project Hail Mary
American Dirt
Unbroken
Totally agree with apples, at least. Liane Moriarty’s books have the best narrator. I think I thought LM was a great writer for a while mostly because I love, love her narrator.
Also recommend the early Louise Penny books. That narrator might be the best I’ve ever heard.
Anonymous wrote:Love podcasts. Love non-fiction audiobooks. I CANNOT do fiction on audio. It’s just terrible. Never realized how much I make up voices for characters in my head when I read.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, my DC who is dyslexic prefers the automated voices because otherwise he hears the book through someone else’s interpretation. Th3 earliest kindle had that as an option and we miss it terribly.
Anonymous wrote:heAnonymous wrote:The narrator matters at least as much as the author for audio books. You have to listen to the samples before buying
+1. When I find good narrators, I follow them as much as the authors and look for other things they've narrated. I always check the samples and I don't hesitate to return an Audible book if the narrator is lousy.
heAnonymous wrote:The narrator matters at least as much as the author for audio books. You have to listen to the samples before buying
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The narrator matters at least as much as the author for audio books. You have to listen to the samples before buying
+1
I read almost exclusively via audible. I love audiobooks.
The narrator is 100% performing and I love it.
Rebecca Lowman reading Rules of Civility
Sissy Spacek reading To Kill a Mockingbird
Neil Patrick Harris reading Henry Huggins