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... to buy off teh iTunes. Any and all books considered, as long as they are well read and unabridged! Also, anyone know what the Black Dahlia is like in audiobook form? |
Recommend me a good Audiobook...
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Universal_Hamster 4,948 posts
Seen 2 years ago
Registered 17 years ago -
Shrimp 1,081 posts
Seen 13 years ago
Registered 17 years ago"The Hobbit, or There And Back Again, by J R R Tolkien. Read by Martin Shaw.
In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit..."
etc
The only audiobook I own. Tis good.gif)
ah... not from iTunes though. I got it on CD (5 discs)
I would quite like to get some Shakespeare plays on audiobook... maybe some good Radio productions... I can't really find the time or energy to read them in book form.
Edited by Shrimp at 22:06:34 22-05-2007 -
The Fatherland audioplay is quite good.
Cheap too, IIRC. -
TakeTheVeil 5,057 posts
Seen 10 years ago
Registered 16 years agoi listened to the BBC radio drama of Brave New World.. thought it was fantastic..truly.. i can see what our granddads and dads wouldve loved about quality radio dramas.
I also tried Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy read by the author himself.. althou i kept falling asleep during it.. -
Universal_Hamster 4,948 posts
Seen 2 years ago
Registered 17 years agoI heard that the HH Guide read by adams was superb, but A: cant find it on iTunes, and B: you say nay.
I think I did see brave new world on iTunes earlier, so I may give it a go.
Fatherland seems quite pricey to me, being that its not even 2 hours long, so I'm going to take the risk with the Black Dahlia. -
Universal Hamster wrote:
Fatherland seems quite pricey to me, being that its not even 2 hours long, so I'm going to take the risk with the Black Dahlia.
It's not an audiobook, per-se. It's an audioplay. Explains the length, but it's decent for what it is. -
TakeTheVeil 5,057 posts
Seen 10 years ago
Registered 16 years agoi didn't say HH Guide was bad.. its quite good from what i heard.. his soothing middle class British tones kept sending me to sleep..but i usually listen to the audiobooks late at night in bed.. so it often happens..
if ya want i can send you the first audio chapter of the HH Guide so you can have a listen.. its only 4mbs so i cant email it along if ya want.. -
DaisyD 11,816 posts
Seen 5 years ago
Registered 16 years agoJust for your info - audible.com tends to be cheaper than iTunes for audiobooks. -
Universal_Hamster 4,948 posts
Seen 2 years ago
Registered 17 years agoTakeTheVeil wrote:
Please do, I'd be very interested to hear it, and my address should be in my profile.
i didn't say HH Guide was bad.. its quite good from what i heard.. his soothing middle class British tones kept sending me to sleep..but i usually listen to the audiobooks late at night in bed.. so it often happens..
if ya want i can send you the first audio chapter of the HH Guide so you can have a listen.. its only 4mbs so i cant email it along if ya want..
Cheers Daisy, I shall take my lazy ass to check audible.com from now on. -
TakeTheVeil 5,057 posts
Seen 10 years ago
Registered 16 years agoupload..click send.. and...done.. -
Universal_Hamster 4,948 posts
Seen 2 years ago
Registered 17 years agoWoo, ta very much! -
sirius47 1 posts
Seen 14 years ago
Registered 14 years agocheck out heart of darkness read by toby stephens at www.silksoundbooks.com or the dupin mysterys read by the wonderful bill nighy
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Universal_Hamster 4,948 posts
Seen 2 years ago
Registered 17 years agoOk, I'm in the mood for another good audiobook, and was wondering if anyone could recommend one on greek mythology? Used to be very into it as a wee 'un, and it occurred to me yesterday that I have forgotten most of the stories I used to love.
Any print recommendations are also welcome. -
phAge 25,487 posts
Seen 3 weeks ago
Registered 18 years agoInteresting factoid: my dad makes/narrates audio books. -
Universal_Hamster 4,948 posts
Seen 2 years ago
Registered 17 years agoOoh, examples? -
Tiger_Walts 16,674 posts
Seen 4 years ago
Registered 19 years ago/looks at thread title
Do they do dictionaries? -
phAge 25,487 posts
Seen 3 weeks ago
Registered 18 years agoUniversal Hamster wrote:
Lately he's done all the Dan Brown books (he thought they were pap as well), and tons of others. All in Danish though, so I doubt they'd be of much use to you.
Ooh, examples?.gif)
EDIT: If you press the button next to the word "prøvelyt" on that page (just under the various covers), you can hear my paw on teh internets! \o/ -
Universal_Hamster 4,948 posts
Seen 2 years ago
Registered 17 years agoTiger_Walts wrote:
/Looks at thread title
/looks at thread title
Do they do dictionaries?
/Cries -
S.J.Rogers 3,593 posts
Seen 5 years ago
Registered 16 years agoThe Long Dark Tea Time of the Soul...
It is by Douglas Adams and is better than the HHGTTG.
I have listened to this Audio book 10 times + -
Tiger_Walts 16,674 posts
Seen 4 years ago
Registered 19 years agoS.J.Rogers wrote:
The Long Dark Tea Time of the Soul...
It is by Douglas Adams and is better than the HHGTTG.
I have listened to this Audio book 10 times +
Just don't get the recent Dirk Gently BBC radio play. I caught the first episode when it aired and the humour was lost somewhere. It was a little too dry. -
S.J.Rogers 3,593 posts
Seen 5 years ago
Registered 16 years ago@Tiger_Walts
Agree + 100
It was very bad and not a bit funny.
The Audio book read by Douglas Adams is fantastic with MANY lol moments.
Worth every peny.
Have Copied it (I mean lent it) to all my friends and they all seem to agree that is is great...
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DaisyD 11,816 posts
Seen 5 years ago
Registered 16 years agoI've been listening to a few Andrew Taylor books recently. Really like An American Boy and am currently on the last book of the Roth Trilogy (The Office of the Dead). Also listened to Kate Mosse's Labyrinth which was very good. I only ever get unabriged books though.
I get all mine from audible.co.uk - Basic membership is £7.99 and that gives you 1 book credit a month. Works out much cheaper than -
Audiothor 3 posts
Seen 14 years ago
Registered 14 years agoIf anyone wants to try a shorter version of the Audiobook - The HUNTRESS series of Audiostories are available from www.audiothor.com
Part Two has just become available and there is also a free sample if anyone wants to try it. -
Agent_Llama 3,691 posts
Seen 2 days ago
Registered 16 years agoThe History Boys is very good. Adapted from the stage version (very closely I might add), and far superior to the film. -
sirius47 wrote:
check out heart of darkness read by toby stephens at www.silksoundbooks.com or the dupin mysterys read by the wonderful bill nighy.gif)
Oh, that site looks fantastic, and it's surprisingly cheap. Cheers. -
Not listened to them for a good few years but the Discworld novels read by Tony Robinson were excellent audiobooks, although they may not be quite as involving as some of the more mature audiobooks.
Don't know if they're available on iTunes at the moment as I can't connect to the store for some reason... -
MetalDog 24,076 posts
Seen 3 years ago
Registered 20 years agoThe BBC Radio 4 production of Lord of the Rings is pretty great (although bizarrely, some of the music in the latter stages is lol bad). No idea if it's on itunes, though.
Also if you can get it, Needful Things - unabridged and read by Stephen King. That rather long, rambling tale of evil-assisted social dysfunction has got me though some of the dullest tasks in the universe. Worth it simply to hear King doing an impression of a yappy neighbours dog =)
@sirius47
I second UncleLou's gratitude on that link - looks good! -
Universal Hamster wrote:
... to buy off teh iTunes.
Any and all books considered, as long as they are well read and unabridged!
Also, anyone know what the Black Dahlia is like in audiobook form?
Mmm, let me make some suggestions...I've been listening to Audiobooks for about 4 years or so and have come across some crackers. Itunes is poor - Audible is better (actually the iTunes audiobooks are from Audible but they tend to sell the shorter, cheaper abridged versions).
First some advice: -
- Avoid abridged. Unabridged is the way to go. This is important.
- An excellent narrator can make a poor book better.
- Inversely a poor narrator can destroy a good book.
- your library is a good source but be prepared to have to convert CDs to your MP3 player.
As for books I would very heavily suggest
The Company, Robert Littel. 40 (yes, four-zero) hours based on a fictional account of the CIA. My first Audiobook.gif)
Hearts in Atlantis, Stephen King. Read by Stephen King and William Hurt. Hurts' narration is the best I have ever heard.
Shantaram, by Gregory David Roberts. A simply wonderful story, and again, fantastically narrated.
The Road, Cormac McCarthy. Bleak, but the characters really come across in audio.
I'd also recommend some of the Pratchett audiobooks and a few Neil Gaiman (Anansi Boys is well narrated by Lenny Henry). Stephen King comes across very well in audio form, so any of his (Black House is good).
The only problem I have with Audible is poor product selection, and the subscription model. I've lost count of the times I've wasted my subscription having to scrape around for a crappy novel because all the ones I want are on the US site and not available in the UK.
I'll stop rambling now
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sam_spade 15,745 posts
Seen 1 week ago
Registered 20 years agoOutlaw Sea - William Langewiesche
A fascinating look into the lawless, both official and unofficial, sea farers and the ships they sail in. -
+1 to most of what AIMcD said. I've been on Audible for a long time now - long enough to have a USA account, which means 2 books a month for $20 - not bad at all given the exchange rate.
In addition to the aforementioned, I would recommend "Enders Game" (Orson Scott Card IIRC). I wouldn't heavily recommend Card's later stuff though.
I love the Pratchett stuff too, but the later stuff is better ("Going Postal", "Thud", "Night Watch" all excellent) than the earlier offerings, and slightly better narration too IMO.
In fact, the narrator is probably MORE important than the content in some ways. Even the best books are impossible to get through if the narration is poor, boring or soporific. God know haw many times I've started some of the books I have. So basically, preview the book first, to check that you don't find the voice annoying or anything.
The LOTR stuff is really well narrated, but I have found difficult to get through, probably because you already know the story.
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