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Narrators you don't like?
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Karen B.
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Sep 05, 2015 08:48AM

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In any case, I discovered that I was missing a lot from this narration so I quit the audio and switched over to ebook. I will know not to get anymore in this series by this narrator.

Very good advice. Fortunately for me, the unlistenable audiobook in question came from the library, so all I was out was my time.



Kate Reading, Barbara Rosenblat, and Susan Ericksen are my top 3 female narrators. I am not fond of Kathleen McInerney who narrates the KATE BERKHOLZER(?) series by Linda Castillo. I tolerate her because I like the series.
I love Scott Brick. I wish he would narrate David Baldacci's books. Ron McClarty is okay, but sometimes I think he's a bit old for some of Mr. Baldacci's Heros.
I love Stephanie Laurens's books. I know Simon Prebble is a bit old for some of the books, but he's a wonderful narrator. The narrator Matthew Bahner(?) who narrated the Cynster Sisters stories is may not terrible, but annoying. He does okay with the male voices, but he's not great at the female voices.
The two narrators I refuse to listen to are Sandra Burr and Macleod Andrews. To me they are not good narrators and sound awful to me. Because of them I have not been able to listen to the Nora Roberts's books they have recorded.



For me, Barbara Rosenblat sounds too old to be Anna Pidgeon. Her voice has a deep somewhat raspy quality that just didn't match with the 'in my head' Anna Pidgeon. I don't mind Scott Brick and I was a bit concerned when I purchased a book he narrated because he is certainly polarizing in these posts. And Mara is right - you have to tolerate George Guidall and I'd rather read whatever he's narrating.

I certainly agree that certain narrators are just unsuitable because of the age that comes through in their voices. There is a woman… Jenna Lamia, who's done some very high profile books, and she sounds like she's 10 or 11 years old. I read her profile and she's actually well into her 20's. But if a character is supposed to be a girl or young lady as in The Invention of Wings, she's superb, with great timing and clarity. She cannot carry off the voice of a mature woman, however. I found her voicing Zelda Fitzgerald just unbelievable.
Some older men and women develop a quaver in their voice which while their reading skills may still be excellent, [George Guidall comes to mind] they aren't very convincing voicing young men or women. I'm not terribly annoyed by quavers except in extreme cases , as long as the reading itself is smooth and inflections appropriate.

Ah Jeffrey! This is the second time you have corrected a homonym! We all make typos, grammar errors and split the occasional infinitive. I'm willing to wager no one among us has an editor. Let's celebrate the odd mistake with the pleasure of learning what the group is listening to. I've added a few of my own words to those of author Ammon Shea's belief that ". . .some rules are useful and that standards have a time and place, he recommends that we let our ears [and eyes] be our guide—and if we can still understand somebody who is speaking [or writing] . . ., we might take time to think about it rather than judge it or [correct it]. Cheers!


Ooops. I didn't see it deleted, but in that vein (vain), let's listen on.


I'm not a big fan of Dick Hill either, however he's nowhere as dreadful as Roberts! He narrates a ton as well, but it's not a choppy speech with no pattern such as Roberts, but just really stylized in a way that doesn't seem to flow well and some pronunciations are a bit off when it's not a common word.
I do wish the producers of these books would research proper nouns they're not familiar with. I listen to a book about New Orleans and just groan when they try and pronounce any street or thing related to the city or it's style.

One narrator I recently listened to was Ginny Auer and I can’t put my finger on what it is I don’t like about her narration, I’m not sure if it’s the tone, cadence or accent that I don’t like but there were times when her narration really annoyed me.
But I have also found that sometimes it is the material I wasn't a big fan of Nicola Barber in the first book I listened to by her but then other books I have enjoyed her narration so sometimes you just never know.



The only audios that I listened to that were narrated by the authors were mostly autobiographies or memoirs. One audio that I listened to that was narrated by the authors was Kicking and Dreaming: A Story of Heart, Soul and Rock and Roll. It was the memoirs of Ann & Nancy Wilson, sisters of the rock band Heart. I loved it because each sister told their respective chapters. It was lovely to feel their emotion as they went back into time.
I've also listened to Rob Lowe, Rick Springfield, Lisa Scottoline (one of her non-mysteries), and Lauren Conrad, a few off the top of my head. Rob Lowe and Rick Springfield were impressive. The others were not.


I am a major fan of Bill Bryson, but doggone, his voice and reading just don't do his books the justi..."
Joshilyn Jackson narrates her own books and I think does a really good job, she has also narrated Lydia Netzer books.





John, I'm halfway through Dirty Chick and I love the author's narration! I am surprised, however, by the poor quality of the audio. There are clicks constantly throughout the audio that should have been removed by engineers. I see that this was produced directly through Audible. I'm surprised they didn't do a better job of cleaning up the files but it hasn't been enough to detract from a great story.

I listen to audiobooks through my Sansa clip. You're probably right, John. It's a curse that I've discussed with other narrators. You hear EVERYTHING after you begin processing your own files. :(


The story is all right, but Miss Monroe isn't a very good narrator. She's better than some, but she should have let someone else read the book. I am getting to the bored point with it and almost want to give up on it, but then there is the other part that wants to finish the story.
Elizabeth Berg reads her own books, but I find her to be a rather good narrator of her own books.



You'd think that big publishing house studios would have someone there to coach author-narrators and celebrity narrators and help them improve their delivery.
As a rule, I skip celebrity narrators. While I enjoyed Dracula overall, Tim Curry's van Helsing was not up to par with the other actors in the audiobook. The only celebrity narrator I've heard that I thought was really good was William Hurt narrating The Sun Also Rises. It's a bit of an acquired taste because the writing itself does not flow the way that modern literature does. He found an excellent way to address that with his cadence and inflection.
Aside from that, I hear a lot more bad audio engineering/production than bad narration. It's pretty easy to remove ear-splitting high frequency sibilant S sounds, but few bother to take the time. I've even heard the narrator's computer fan go on and off in the background. Better to eliminate that during recording, but again, it's possible to remove it during editing.

Several times I have disagreed with my director/author's preferences on pace and styling but whoever pays me has the right to ask that of me and then I do the best I can to make them happy! (I might not put the finished book up on my reel, but it is their right)

"Isn't it interesting how some narrators can be both annoying or enjoyable to different ears? "
There are a few narrators who just plain get on my nerves, yet others rate them highly.
It's not all about skill either, one chap I love, well, sometimes it's hard to differentiate between his females, yet he has that undefinable something. Maybe it's his ability to, quite simply, tell a story. It's a gift!
I understand that I won't like all books or all narrators, but what I find intolerable is a poor, slapdash and low quality recording. It makes me feel ripped off and I'm offended that "someone" feels this is good enough for you and me. We pay, we deserve better.
Who does get the final word on quality, anyone know?

Excellent narration!! Superbly entertaining!! Loved it!!

I understand the sentiment, but I disagree with the details of what you wrote. By far the worst-quality narration and production I've heard are from traditional professional studios. Plenty of high-quality audiobooks are created in closet home studios.

Michael Kramer on the other hand, all his characters have distinct voices and his reading makes you want to keep listening


I think Kate Reading has been terrific narrating the books I've read; however, she may not be a great fit for that one.


In your comments, i did see the same names over and over and over again and so I'm going to take those names under advisement and try a book by each of them; I'll let you know what Camp I fall into!


Thank God, I got SUMMER SECRETS, from Overdrive. I would have cried had I paid for the book.
Mary Alice Monroe, who writes the SUMMER GIRLS series is another writer who shouldn't be a narrator. I thought I'd never get through her book THE SUMMER GIRLS.
The only author that I have come across as good writer and narrator of her own books is Elizabeth Berg.

- Ryan West is a good narrator but his female adaptation strikes a nerve with me.
- Patty Mo - I'm a retired military brat who was stationed in the south for a long time. There is the southern accent, the thick heavy southern accent, and there is the fake southern accent. Anyone from the south can tell immediately tell whose athentic and not. There is a false pushed accent that I find quite a lot of actors try to immitate (*cough* Anna Paquine as Rogue in the x-men *cough*). Patty Mo really ruined the first in the Cuda Confessions series for me.
Logan McAllistar - Is flat. No emotions to his narration at all. I was very happy when the second book in the Alpha's Claim was done by someone else.
- Emily Duante - Good narrator but didn't do "Love Left Behind" very well. Her rendition made the lead female sound smug and snobbery. Didn't give that book any favors. I truely believe she was only picked for that one because she could do a New York accent. Unfortunately that NY accent was only good for one of the characters in the book who had the least amount of dialog.
- Liona Gem - From "Blood Lust." Also retitled as "Dark Cravings" by Madeline Pryce. Love the book but Liona Gem's redendition gave the leading female a different persona. It didn't fit the character at all.
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