Reading the 20th Century discussion
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What books are you reading now? (2020)

Yes,..."
One must consciously make an effort to separate the written text form an audiobook narrator's interpretation. I must do this because I have no other choice. How do I do this? I repeat the words spoken by the narrator in my head.

All I can say, as I listened to The Siege of Krishnapur again this morning, is that I hear funny lines. The humor is in the author's choice of words. For example, boar hunting is called pig-sticking. one guy's thoughts are "poached" and that apoplectic snapdragons guard the drives approaching a house are amusing expressions to ME. I am glad I have the ability to notice the humor. I have thrown out three examples, but there are tons.
Here you have the words printed out. You are not being influenced by the narrator of the audiobook!
Humor can exist in a serious book relaying a critical point of view!

I got Alice in Wonderland as an Audible Deal and the narrator was American. My daughter wouldn't listen to it, as she found it jarring, so I understand that. It did sound odd and I know there is the Disney film, but Oxford is punting and about as British as you can get. She remembers being taken to the Alice shop in Oxford as well - goodness knows how they will re-open that, it's so tiny!
However, I know what Chrissie means and I do agree that Audible is wonderful. If you struggle to read print, the choice is far, far wider than it was. I would probably prefer a 'bad' reading of a book, than not reading it, but it can spoil a book for me if I don't like the narrator. There are a couple I have come across - not many - that sound as though they are reading the weather, rather than a novel!
However, I know what Chrissie means and I do agree that Audible is wonderful. If you struggle to read print, the choice is far, far wider than it was. I would probably prefer a 'bad' reading of a book, than not reading it, but it can spoil a book for me if I don't like the narrator. There are a couple I have come across - not many - that sound as though they are reading the weather, rather than a novel!
Thanks Chrissie for those examples from Farrell: 'apoplectic snapdragons' sold it to me!
And yes, I agree, we can always be 'resistant' to narrators/film makers and consciously see around them.
And yes, I agree, we can always be 'resistant' to narrators/film makers and consciously see around them.
Susan wrote: "I got Alice in Wonderland as an Audible Deal and the narrator was American. My daughter wouldn't listen to it"
{Smirk} :))
I agree, Audible is wonderful - it's transformed commuting (remember that?!) and boring housework. And sometimes the audio can enhance the reading experience especially when there's a strong narrative voice: I'm thinking of the Wolf Hall trilogy and Milkman as examples of brilliant audio.
{Smirk} :))
I agree, Audible is wonderful - it's transformed commuting (remember that?!) and boring housework. And sometimes the audio can enhance the reading experience especially when there's a strong narrative voice: I'm thinking of the Wolf Hall trilogy and Milkman as examples of brilliant audio.
And Sean Barrett reading the Slough House books, which are wonderful. And Hugh Fraser reading Poirot - sublime!
Plus whoever reads the Stuart MacBride books. Such a lovely voice - Steve Worsley. And the narrator of the P D James books is good - Daniel Weyman. I started listening to the latest P D James this week and, once Daniel Weyman had started talking, I was really 'there.' He can be quite chilling in the murder parts!
The narrator of the Campion books is excellent too.
Anyone else have a particular favourite?
Plus whoever reads the Stuart MacBride books. Such a lovely voice - Steve Worsley. And the narrator of the P D James books is good - Daniel Weyman. I started listening to the latest P D James this week and, once Daniel Weyman had started talking, I was really 'there.' He can be quite chilling in the murder parts!
The narrator of the Campion books is excellent too.
Anyone else have a particular favourite?
Juliet Stevenson reading nineteenth century classics: her North and South is wonderful, as are her Austens - and my last couple of Audible credits went on her reading Henry James, The Golden Bowl and The Wings of the Dove.
I haven't listened to the Hugh Fraser Poirots yet but they sound like I'd love them.
I haven't listened to the Hugh Fraser Poirots yet but they sound like I'd love them.
Yes, Juliet Stevenson is an excellent narrator. I listened to Miriam Margolyes reading a Muriel Spark too and that was brilliant. I think it was The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie.


And yes, I agree, we can always be 'resistant' to narrators/film makers and consciously see around them."
I don't feel so upset now. I simply cannot accept that Farrell's writing is without humor. I like authors throw humor into books with serious messages.

I can see Elizabeth's point though - humour in writing is often a very personal thing, and there have been books that others found funny and I didn't, so it works both ways, and although I don't do audiobooks I am aware of what a difference good narration can make thanks to BBC Radio.





I wonder whether those British covers had me expecting humour from the start - the NYRB covers are much more austere.
I later tracked down a second hand copy of his earlier A Girl in the Head, which was very different and not a book I could wholeheartedly recommend - the earlier novels are rarer and more expensive.

I know the names of lots and lots of good narrators, it is hard to pick just one or two. Also sometimes a good narrator fails in the reading of a book.

I've just read...
Dirty Weekend (1991) by Helen Zahavi
...so I could listen to the relevant edition of the wonderful Curiously Specific Book Club podcast (which is predictably great, of course).
Here’s my review
4/5
Dirty Weekend (1991) by Helen Zahavi
...so I could listen to the relevant edition of the wonderful Curiously Specific Book Club podcast (which is predictably great, of course).
Here’s my review
4/5

I'm having such a crazy-busy time at work at the moment that I've been reading August's PD James for the Detectives group and after 4 days am still only 200 pages in :(
Oh, me too, RC. I'll have no real reading time for the next couple of weeks, due to work and the course I am doing. Never mind.

I do not find nastiness funny.

As your reviews always include the narrator, it is hard not to assume the narrator influences your like/dislike of a book, and thus, your interpretation of it. I have also read reviews by others who complain the edition (usually Kindle/ebook) was filled with typos. And there are those of us who might review a book (note: complain) where there is a lack of quotation marks for dialogue, for example. All of us are influenced by more than just the author's words.

As your reviews always include the narrator, it is hard not to assu..."
My reviews give a separate rating for the audiobook narration. I give two rating for every book--one for the book and one for the narration.

You miss my point. If you are actually able to separate the narration from the book, then you're the only one who can separate elements - even those of us who read print editions.

After going through the attack scenes, one might easily forget / choose to ignore the preceding sections containing satirical humor. My question now is why the author chose to combine the two.............

Maybe he didn't. Many of us have laughed when uncomfortable, even when what we've laughed at isn't really humor nor funny.

You miss my point. If you are actuall..."
I do NOT think I am the only one who can separate the two. Most people choose audiobooks because they enjoy reading books in this format. I read them because this is my only alternative. I want to judge the written text so I make an effort to separate the two. Other people could separate the two if they wanted to. They don't bother since they can choose kindle or a paper book.
ETA It definitely IS possible to separate the too but it takes an added effort . I have mentioned above how I go about doing this--I repeat the words in my head.


We are discussing a book in this group to which I gave 3 stars. I'll just say that this discussion has probably influenced my appreciation of that book and that I might have been wrong in giving it only 3 stars. (Yes, please note: I've said I *might* have been wrong.)
I think you're both right! Chrissie, you're an experienced listener and make the conscious effort to separate narration and text which someone else might not do.
I struggled recently with the audio of On The Road - Matt Dillon mumbled, gabbled, and then SUDDENLY shouted! I hated it and had to return it to Audible. As I'd already read the book, I knew it was the narration not the text in that case and happily re-read the book instead.
But, Elizabeth, your point too is right - I have a friend who stopped taking NetGalley books because she found it off-putting in cases where the formatting hadn't been cleaned up, and couldn't enjoy the text itself as a result.
I'd say I'm also affected by writing but maybe we're not equally affected by the same writing ;)
I struggled recently with the audio of On The Road - Matt Dillon mumbled, gabbled, and then SUDDENLY shouted! I hated it and had to return it to Audible. As I'd already read the book, I knew it was the narration not the text in that case and happily re-read the book instead.
But, Elizabeth, your point too is right - I have a friend who stopped taking NetGalley books because she found it off-putting in cases where the formatting hadn't been cleaned up, and couldn't enjoy the text itself as a result.
I'd say I'm also affected by writing but maybe we're not equally affected by the same writing ;)
Chrissie wrote: "I must say that once you reach the gory, horrendous attacks depicted in The Siege of Krishnapur one gets a very different impression of the book."
You're intriguing me hugely - I'm going to have to read this!
You're intriguing me hugely - I'm going to have to read this!


Well, fortunately I didn't get the humor and therefore it didn't spoil the novels for me.

"
Ha! Probably not. I have been interested less and less in reading Agatha Christie because her writing is on the simple side. My face to face group had a short discussion of Hemingway a few months ago. His writing is also simple. I would at least partially attribute his success to the fact that when he was writing people had less education and could enjoy his very good stories. Perhaps Steinbeck is in the same category, for his prose is also simple. When I say "simple" here, the vocabulary and sentence structure has been analyzed at about (US) 6th grade level, or 12 year olds.

Peace Like a River by Leif Enger - 4 stars - My Review

I agree, Chrissie, that was the point I was making earlier when you first asked about satire. Farrell is initially satirising the British attitudes to imperialism etc, but as the book progresses we can discern deeper points about human reactions to the situations they are in. Personally, I liked the combination, but others may prefer one angle or the other.

Yes, read it, its good! I must read Troubles, I've had it waiting for ages.



Elizabeth, I do not want to argue with you. I promise you, I have not CHOSEN to misinterpret your remarks! I am sorry you believe so.


Not about slavery. Do you people think the US invented slavery? No. Slavery was an institution in for centuries. The US Constitution forbade the importation of slaves 20 years after ratification in an attempt to rid ourselves of it. It was a compromise because the southerners (mostly English) would not have agreed to join the country. It was determined the country would not have survived without them.



And predates our being a country. Slavery was brought to the Americas by the English and existed here for well over 150 years before the US became a country.
Before anyone completely misunderstands me, for I might not have been saying what I meant very clearly. I do not believe that subjugation of peoples is a laughing matter. But while I point to the British in my first paragraph here (and my English ancestors came here in 1620, and kept coming for decades after), let me assure you that I think Europeans in general as well as the US have done things not be be bragged about. Those things need an honest portrayal in fiction, even when the victims of such subjugation sought comic relief in their own lives. The perpetrators of such subjugation ought not to be shown in a humorous light.

... the fate of lower-middle-class Californians: "I'd die in the same bedroom I'd grown up in, looking up at the cracks in the stucco ceiling that've been there since '68 quake."
By 1968, I was living in northern California so not directly affected by the quake. But I was among the lower-middle-class Californians. I do not accept the premise. That person's parent had a college education. My parents did not. Is this supposed to be racial, that black people with an education were somehow not upwardly mobile, while those of us without were? This is simply not reality. Do I think there is discrimination in my country? Yes, but in '68 the women's movement was starting. Do I think there was discrimination based on gender? Of course. Do I think discrimination exists only in the US? No, I don't.

Story of a 1960s folk-rock-psychedelic band from their formation to their reception in America as part of the “British Invasion.” The story features cameo appearances by real people of the music scene, which lends a historical flavor, as do the referenced cultural events of the time (1967-1968). It ventures into the expected areas of “sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll.”
Utopia Avenue by David Mitchell - 4 stars - My Review

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I agree with you. The humor is dark, but it is there!