Audiobooks discussion
Audiobooks in the News
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Listening isn't cheating



I think that I'll tune out just as easily to a physical book as I will to an audio one, so yeah, I don't see it as cheating. When I'm tired I miss the same amount of lines / context reading or listening. =P
I've been using text to speech a lot lately. Really helps me get through fiction digitally without exhausting the eyes.




Well said, helps with situations like this I agree.




Yep. The most strident "That's cheating!" people I know are people who almost never read. If they don't read, and they can't articulate why it's cheating, I can't see why I should pay attention to them.
Maybe they think we listen to audiobooks like they listen to radio - i.e. background noise that they use to fill the silence but don't actually pay attention to?


Sure audiobooks allow me to read with my eyes closed but that doesn't mean that my brain isn't actively working to understand what I'm reading. Especially since english isn't my native language, I have to concentrate as hard to listen to a book than to read it.
So no, listening isn't cheating !


So I'm not just placidly accepting the words, I'm interpreting them, same as I would interpret written words.

If that's their reason (that narrators may not interpret the book exactly as the author intended), then translations would logically be counted as cheating too. There's even more leeway there for the interpretation to go astray.


I think (/hope) that those intolerant reading purists are just a (vocal) minority.

I was refuting my own imagined argument, when I said that there have been times that I've disagreed with the narrator's tone, sometimes to the point of thinking that it changed the author's intent with that line, meaning that even though I was listening to the narrator's tone, I had also developed my own personal thoughts.

I agree with you. Why listening to an audiobook would bother someone is beyond me! And as Katherine stated that she has a visual impairment, is it considered cheating then?
Some people have too much time on their hands, lol.

The argument was also noted in the article. I agree that audiobook readers do listen critically and many have noted, as have I, at times that they felt a narrator missed the intended emphasis or tone of the author. I think most of us do recognize that the narrator is merely providing one interpretation and we may also re-inflect certain sentences in our own minds. So, still not cheating.
I am also blind and never learned braille because screen-reading programs for computers made print readily available to me. I noticed no one claims using fingers to read braille, since it doesn't use the eyes, is cheating though.
I suppose it may come down to what a person defines as the principle function of reading. If it is to experience every word an author uses to convey an idea, relay facts, or tell a story, then visual and auditory readers are equal. If the point is to demonstrate and/or increase the skills involved in visual reading, then I guess we auditory readers are out of luck. Me, I'm in it for the content.





Tina wrote: "I've been an Audible member for around 20 years. My library is so large it is unwieldy..."
I can't imagine what my Audible account will be like after that long! I've had mine just under three years, and I already have over 300 books in my account. My daughter was just giving me a hard because we've both had our accounts for so long and I literally have seven times as many books as she does. But I have listened to over half of the ones in my account thus far (as well as listening to several of her books with her). And the ones I haven't listened to yet - I plan to!
Happy listening!



Unfortunately, the original claim has been made by many people, including some on Goodreads (not in this group of course!)


I read regular books, ebooks and listen to audiobooks in one happy mix, and some books with relevant illustrations, colored letters meaning different things etc. are more suitable for print, but I've more than once given a book an extra star because of an awsome narrator

https://www.newyorker.com/humor/daily..."
REALLY enjoyed this! So, it appears we audiobook readers have gained sufficient credibility to feel secure about being militant! ;P Come the revolution...
What would our protest signs say?
Duh, we won't carry no stinkin' printed signs!

https://www.newyorker.com/humor/daily..."
Mic drop. :)

https://www.newyorker.com/humor/daily..."
...Duh, we won't carry no stinkin' printed signs!"
Between and article and Jeanie's comment, I can't stop smiling :)




Ignore them and enjoy your audiobooks.

Ignore them and enjoy your audiobooks."
Hahahahaha.


I've gotten the best of both worlds. I was a prolific visual reader when I was younger (though without the "superiority" component). When I switched almost exclusively to audiobooks, I found that I was an even more prolific reader for the reasons we listeners already know: reading while doing chores, walking, and driving more than doubled my exposure to great books. In fact I wish I had discovered audiobooks earlier in life, when they were still "Books on Tape."
I wonder how the "anti-audios" feel about blind persons who listen to audiobooks in lieu of reading the Braille versions, or to access books that aren't available in Braille? Are the blind folks "cheating" too?
The threat of blindess is why I tried audiobooks in the first place. In the early '90's I was diagnosed with Glaucoma, and in my particular case the Ophthamalogists weren't entirely certain about a positive prognosis. So I panicked and started getting audiobooks to read - I was concerned that many of the obscure titles I was reading would not be available in Braille editions.
I was amazed by how well the readers performed, and so took to the audio versions instantly. As a bonus my Glaucoma did turn out to be treatable, so I can also occasionally access print versions of nonfiction for reference, or rare titles to satisfy the collecting demon.
If this is "cheating," then cheaters sometimes do prosper.

I've gott..."
Well said, and congratulations on prospering! ;P
I am one of the blind who reads via audiobook... and never learned braille because technology made print forms accessible. In fact, many speculate that braille will disappear entirely from use someday due to technology. Some blind persons used to--possibly some still do--called those who used text-to-speech rather than braille for reading "cheaters"... ah well.
I think for many it is because visual reading and braille are skills that must be acquired rather than occurring naturally as part of human development (for those who can hear). They feel cheated at having put in the hard work acquiring the skill only to have a more natural form take its place. Imagine how all those poor monks felt about their hand-written manuscripts once the printing press came into being! ;)
http://nymag.com/scienceofus/2016/08/...