Poll
The Goodreads Librarians are wondering how we would like to handle "pagination" of audiobooks.
So, if you had your way, how would the length of an audiobook be measured by goodreads? (For status updates, record-keeping, etc. purposes.)
Please comment!
So, if you had your way, how would the length of an audiobook be measured by goodreads? (For status updates, record-keeping, etc. purposes.)
Please comment!
Number of hours
Number of equivalent pages
Number of discs
Number of minutes
Number of chapters
Other (please comment)
Poll added by: Sara ♥
Comments Showing 51-59 of 59 (59 new)
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message 51:
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Kim
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Oct 30, 2013 01:57PM

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I like to use the stats feature to show how many pages I've read in a year. So anything other than the number of pages screws up my count. Here is an example of how I handle audiobooks, Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World. It shows both then length of the book for those interested and keeps the number of pages for those who like to track that enabling the built-in Goodreads functionality. Number of hours/minutes standardizes the number of CDs and/or chapters and solves the digital downloads issue from Audible which does not have a CD count. Inevitably, however, someone changes my entry to something less useful and instead of fighting it by changing it back and forth, I change my edition from audiobook to hardcover because the pages are most important to me.

Also, for progress you should do "time remaining" as audible, itunes players show the time remaining and NOT the time played. This is opposite of book pages progess.


I can't imagine how chapter count could be seen as a meaningful number. The accepted standard is between 3,000 and 6,000 words. Chapters get us further from the actual question we should be asking: how many words? There are no hard and fast rules with the chapter. The idea of the chapter is to provide stopping points. It is meant to divide a book into portions that can be read within one sitting, but what is a 'sitting'? People are all different. Authors are different too. The fact that the craft of writing is a creative one can muck up any hard and fast rules. A chapter can be any length. It's entirely up to the author, and what they can slide past their publisher. I've seen 2 word chapters in professionally published works. I've also seen authors rattle on in excess of 20,000 words in a single chapter.
And number of discs? Okay, the standard CDA audio format yields 60, 70 or 80 minutes per disc depending on compression and disc size, so I suppose that is of some use. But that rule of thumb goes right out the window when we start talking about MP3 CD, or heaven forbid, the Audible standard: AAX file format downloaded as whole units, no CD included. Again, we slide further away from a meaningful number.
The one thing we all can agree on is that if the book is read aloud, page count becomes a mostly meaningless statistic. Though, as a dumbed down rule of thumb, I've found that 100,000 words produces a page count of around 300, and an audiobook of around 10 hours. If the author conforms to the 3,000 - 6,000 word limit on chapter length, the number of chapters should be between 16 and 33. The average reader, reading aloud, should be able to go through 10,000 words in an hour, or roughly 1.6 to 3.3 chapters. This formula is obviously far from perfect, but it gives a ballpark idea.