03 April 2012

2012 Audie Finalists

The Audies are awards given annually for the best audiobooks.  The Audio Publishers Association, a non-profit trade organization, gives these awards and this year's awards will be announced in June.  Awards are given in more than 20 categories.

This year I'm rooting for Chime by Franny Billingsley in the "teens" category, Bossypants by Tina Fey in the "narration by the author" category, and Bruiser by Neal Shusterman in the "multi-voiced performance" category. My reviews of these audiobooks are coming soon.



Evermore by Alyson Noel

Narrated by Katie Schorr.
Audiobook published by Macmillan Audio.
Formats available: print, ebook, MP3 audiobook, CD audiobook.

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Here's how forgettable this book is: I was two hours into the audiobook before I remembered that, not only had I bought the book for my library about a year ago, but I had even read it when it first came out.  And though I remembered reading it, vaguely, I honestly could not remember how it ended.  It's just the kind of book that my high school girls love, and I haven't listened to as many audiobooks in this genre as I should, so I persisted.

Stop me if you've heard this before: 
Teen girl loses her family and moves to a new town to live with a relative she knows but has never spent much time with.  She goes to the local high school where she is a loner with few friends.  A new boy shows up at school who's dark, mysterious, and ridiculously good-looking.  He can read minds, moves super-fast, and doesn't eat.  Oh, and by the way, he's immortal and has been around for hundreds of years.  He is immediately smitten with loner girl who feels unworthy of his affection.  She knows he isn't your typical teen but can't quite figure out what's going on...

Have you read this book?  I have, and it was called Twilight.  I enjoyed it-- Twilight, that is.  Now I'm not a snob about Twilight knock-off novels, I've read and enjoyed many of them. So trust me when I say that if that's what you're looking for, you can do better than Evermore.

Katie Schorr has a decent "teen-y" voice and does an adequate job reading the book but doesn't redeem what is, ultimately, a very forgettable novel.  Only recommended to uber-fans of the genre.

05 February 2012

The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch with Jeffry Zaslow

Narrated by Erik Singer.
Audiobook published by Random House Audio.
Formats available: print, ebook, MP3 audiobook, CD audiobook.

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For some reason I feel guilty that this was one of the least enjoyable books I have ever listened to.  I think of this feeling as "women's guilt": something particular to women like me who have been raised to feel shame when we dislike someone or something that society tells us we should like.  Like cats, or newborn babies.  Somehow it feels wrong to dislike the story of a man who is not only dead but highly esteemed by others.

Randy Pausch was, by his own assessment, an incredibly intelligent man.  He was also, by his own assessment, a likeable, funny, generous, and respectable man.  But there in-lies my problem with this book; I've never liked people who are full of themselves.  Many would say, I'm sure, that Randy Pausch had every reason to be full of himself, that he was just as intelligent and funny and generous as he said he was, and I don't doubt they are right.  But his arrogant and cliched writing style rubbed me the wrong way and unfortunately his purported message, that of living your dreams and seizing the day, left me thoroughly uninspired.

Erik Singer does a fine job of narrating the book.

15 December 2011

Blindspot : a novel by a Gentleman in Exile and a Lady in Disguise by Jane Kamensky and Jill Lepore

Narrated by John Lee and Cassandra Campbell.
Audiobook published by Blackstone Audio, 2008.
Formats available: print, ebook, MP3 audiobook, CD audiobook.

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Reading:

This book is unique and very hard to put a label on. Blindspot is an unusual love story. It's an historical romantic comedy, but it is also a mystery. Picture Boston, 1764.  It's just before the revolution and there's a lot of political tension between the separatists and the loyalists.  There is also a great deal of angst and debate about slavery going on.  Amidst the political and social intrigue we find two characters who are both present to, and yet separate from, the happenings around them. Stewart Jameson, a Scottish portrait painter has fled his home and come to Boston to escape his debts.  Fanny Easton, daughter of a wealthy Bostonian judge, is disowned by her father after having an affair with her brother's tutor. Jameson and Fanny meet when Fanny disguises herself as a boy (called Francis Weston) and becomes Jamie's apprentice.

Fanny (as Weston) soon falls in love with her master and Jamie is equally besotted by Weston.  They spend their days painting together the portraits of  colonial political figures and their love remains hidden, to themselves if not the reader.  Into this love affair that isn't (yet) steps Dr. Ignatius Alexander.  Dr. Alexander is an escaped slave and friend of Jamie's.  His arrival takes place just before the murder of Samuel Bradstreet, the most important political figure of the day (and an abolitionist).  When two of Bradstreet's slaves are convicted of his murder, Jamie, Weston, and Dr. Alexander decide to investigate the murder in hopes of exonerating them.  

The story is told in the voices of Fanny and Jamie and the two narrators, John Lee and Cassandra Campbell, capture them beautifully.  Lee does credit to Jamie's sarcastic Scottish brogue and Campbell portrays both the silly romantic yet determined Fanny Easton and the witty sly self-aware Francis Weston equally well.

I enjoyed this book very much.  It is one of those books for which the audio really enriches the experience of the novel.  One complaint: it's longer than it needs to be and the story slows to a crawl towards the end.  Just when I thought it should be wrapping up nicely (the murderer revealed, Alexander freed, and Fanny and Jamie living happily ever after) I looked at the play list and saw there were 3 HOURS left to listen to.  That being said, the fact that I did listen to the end means that I enjoyed the book enough to not give up on it.  Very much recommended.

17 October 2011

When You Are Engulfed in Flames by David Sedaris

Narrated by David Sedaris.
Audiobook published by Hachette Audio, 2008.
Formats available: print, ebook, MP3, CD, and cassette audiobooks.

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What can I say about David Sedaris? If you think he's hilarious, as I do, you'll enjoy this book. If you don't, well you won't find anything new here to entice you to give him another shot. This book is classic David Sedaris fare: travel writing + childhood nostalgia + self-deprecation, with a few potshots at his parents and partner thrown in for good measure. This probably isn't his funniest book ever, but I laughed, a lot.

Who could possibly narrate a David Sedaris book but the man himself? Now, I am not of the opinion that all authors should narrate the audio versions of their books. I've listened to too many versions of that going terribly wrong. But David Sedaris is in a league of his own. His voice is so unique, so instantly recognizable. I can't imagine listening to anyone else read his books. Very much recommended.

22 September 2011

Little Bee by Chris Cleave

Narrated by Anne Flosnik.
Audiobook published by Tantor Media, Inc., 2009.
Formats available: print, ebook, MP3 audiobook, CD audiobook.

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Before reading Little Bee, my experiences with Nigeria had been limited to the novels of Chinua Achebe and the "Nigerian prince" who likes to spam my email every so often by asking me to send him money. Little Bee took me to Nigeria and reminded me that the world is full of things that I know nothing about.

We meet Little Bee, our eponymous protagonist, in the immigration detention center she has found herself in after attempting to illegally immigrate to the UK. By twist of fate she is released along with three other women though she has no papers and is in the country illegally. She has no one to turn to except a couple, Sarah and Andrew, who she met briefly on a beach in Nigeria two years before. Although she does not know Sarah and Andrew, she feels a bond with them as a result of the traumatic experience they shared on the beach.

Ultimately this story is about how much of ourselves we're willing to give others. What do we give and how much do we keep back? This book is not a light-hearted read but it is a powerful one. Although I can't say that I "loved" it, I do highly recommend it. I give the story 4 out of 5 stars partly because I don't feel like Chris Cleave gets the voice of 4-year-old Charlie, Sarah and Andrew's son, quite right. If you're not the mother of a 4-year-old boy (as I happen to be) you probably won't notice. I also felt that the book ended rather abruptly. It left me feeling as if I'd missed something important.

I do especially recommend the audiobook. Anne Flosnik does a stunning job bringing the voice of Little Bee to life. I can't give her 5 stars simply because she struggled with Andrew's Irish accent and has trouble at times transitioning between Little Bee's Nigerian accent and Sarah's British one.

On the whole I thought this was a brilliant book read very, very well.