Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion
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Best Boxall Audiobooks

Then again I loved the story iteself so this probably added to my love of the audio.



Edwin, boy do I agree with that! Superb.


Thanks for the suggestion of Lolita by Jeremy Irons.


Madame Bovary
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Père Goriot
Regeneration
Fifth Business
The End of the Affair (Colin Firth narrates - excellent)
A Clockwork Orange (Tom Hollander narrates - this is my second favourite after Lolita for narration)
1984
Thanks for starting this thread, I am always interested in recommendations of high quality audio productions.


I also liked The Great Gatsby narrated by Jake Gyllenhaal.
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn come from the same edition as praised Heart of Darkness, this one is done by Elijah Wood and I found it uplifting and cheerful.


1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die That Are Available From Public Domain – Part II – audio books

The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins, Therese Raquin by Zola. The Hand of Ethelbert by Hardy. And Dickens' and the Brontes' are also great books. Enjoy it!!

The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins, Therese Raquin by Zola. The Hand of Ethelbert by Hardy. And Dickens' and the Brontes' are also great books. Enjoy it!! "
J might have meant, and I certainly also mean, are there any of these audio recordings that you've personally listened to and can recommend? I'm sure the 'books' are great but Librovox recordings often aren't. In fact I found them so bad that they actually put me off audiobooks for about 10 years until people encouraged me to have another go with professional ones (borrowed from the library).
I know some Librovox recordings are meant to be good. I haven't found any but I haven't listened to that many.
For those who are interested here is a thread in LibraryThing where specific readers are mentioned:
http://www.librarything.com/topic/162361


The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins, Therese Raquin by Zola. The Hand of Ethelbert by Hardy. And..."
Nicola, I've added the LibriVox version with a "dramatic reading" any time is available.

Yes, precisely. My question really is: If for each ten books I read I may listen to one audiobook – then which one should it be that I listen to rather then read?

Yes, precisely. My question really is: If for each ten books I read I may listen to one audiobook – then ..."
J, I use to listen some audio books while I'm driving, either if I'm stuck in traffic jam or travelling.
"Too many books, so little time."
:O)

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...

I just bought this one yesterday. It's currently on sale at Audible for $6.95 for members - sale ends tonight at 11:59 ET. Or, if you happen to own the Kindle edition (or can download it from your library) you can buy the audio from Audible for $3.99.

I listened to that and it sounded great and hear-felt but not sentimental. Especially for a European very, very interesting.

I listened to that and it sounded great and hear-felt but not sentimental..."
As the OP I would like to point out that the tread was meant to be about books on the 1001 list. None of these are.

I'm adding it to the LibraryThings thread (link at the start of this thread) along with the other books I've thought were really very well narrated.

I also like Anthony Heald, and second the suggestion of his Crime and Punishment. I think he also narrated the version of Moby Dick I listened to. Very good.
For lady narrators, I liked Lorna Raver's reading of The Age of Innocence. And when it comes to Jane Austen, none but Juliet Stevenson will do!!
With regard to Librivox, I dabble in there sometimes, but I'm very picky with my narrators. I can't stand the versions that change narrator with every chapter, or that have a different reader for every character's voice. That said, I did like my Librivox version of The Vicar of Wakefield--the narrator had a pleasing Irish lilt. After Vicar I looked up other books he had read, and also listened to his narration of Michael Kohlhaas. (I think his handle is Tadhg?)
I also have a Librivox version of Uncle Silas (different, single narrator) waiting in the wings. The narrator sounds quite good in the sample.
Bonus suggestion: Journey to the Center of the Earth read by the one and only Tim Curry. "How delicious!" (He actually says this in the book. In his smarmy Tim Curry voice. What's not to love?)

I find that I tend to struggle with more modern books, plots that jump around, a lack of plot, or anything too experimental that if I were actually reading it on paper, I would be flipping around to remind myself who is who, where we are and so on. For example, I got about 2 hours into the audiobook of The Dispossessed by Ursula K Le Guin and it was just not working for me. I kept missing the massive jumps in time and point-of-view to the point where I had no idea what was going on. I also, unwisely, purchased the audio version of The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle without knowing what I was getting into. Now that I know a bit more about the experimental nature of the book, I'm leery to listen--I'll find a print version instead.

(From my review:) I have read that other people felt it was spooky to have the book read by Walter White (from Breaking Bad) from the grave. I fast stopped thinking about Walter White. And maybe the voice is not quite the same: In one of the last chapters 9 year old Linda has number of lines. It is very impressive how he can soften the voice to a 9 year old girl's (well, almost).

Kevin Branagh - The Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
Tim Curry and Alan Cumming - Dracula by Bram Stoker
Tim Curry - A Christmas Carol

I totally agree with Their Eyes Were Watching God--the audio got me to appreciate the different voices so much more than reading the text did. They sounded more real and less caricature. (I believe that's because of my own lack of imagination, not Hurston's use of dialect.)


https://librivox.org/jane-eyre-versio...
read by Elizabeth Klett


War and Peace - the narrator deserves an Oscar for his amazing range of voices from old men to young girls. There..."
Janet, I also read Moby Dick and War and Peace as audiobooks. I can't remember which narrators I had, but they were fantastic! I'd highly recommend audio for anyone who is daunted by these books.
Currently I'm listening to the Neville Jason narration of Eugene Onegin by Alexander Pushkin. It's a novel in verse, and I find it very pleasant to listen to. However, it does take a certain amount of concentration so I keep it for times when I'm not too distracted (driving is out!)

War and Peace - the narrator deserves an Oscar for his amazing range of voices from old men to young girls. There..."
Which narrator for Moby Dick did you listen to? There have been a lot of them. I listened to Anthony Heald and he was fantastic.

Yes, it looks like I also listened to Anthony Heald. He was really fantastic. And my W&P narrator was...oh hey! Neville Jason again! I do like him :)
And you can't go wrong with anything narrated by Simon Vance. Even the phonebook.



Wendy - I couldn't agree more about Simon Vance. Sooooo good!!!
I would also recommend anything by John Lee (especially Dumas - great French pronunciation), Simon Prebble, Juliet Stevenson, or Josephine Bailey. All super pros with great accent work and wonderful pacing. If the pacing isn't right, it just doesn't work for me.


Books mentioned in this topic
The Old Man and the Sea (other topics)Treasure Island (other topics)
White Teeth (other topics)
Sula (other topics)
The Postman Always Rings Twice (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Fyodor Dostoevsky (other topics)Philip Roth (other topics)
Bram Stoker (other topics)
Bram Stoker (other topics)
Alexander Pushkin (other topics)
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I have seen many mention Kenneth Branagh's Heart of Darkness as something extraordinary.
If for each ten books I read I may listen to one audiobook – then which one should it be that I listen to rather then read?