Audiobooks discussion
What audiobooks do you listen to more than once?

Christopher Moore never ceases to make me chuckle. I have Lamb on my wish list. I keep waiting for it to go on sale. Maybe it will be an Audible daily deal around the holidays. :)



I'm tempted to relisten to some series like Amelia Peabody, Vorkosigan or Riyria, mentioned above. But I have close to 100 books I haven't started yet, so it's hard to justify a reread.

I'm just starting a second listen of the Chief Inspector Gamache series and enjoying Louise Penny's wonderful writing along with Ralph Cosham's wonderful narration. Well worth a second listen.

Same old same old here :)
HP, LOTR
Probably more series I reread/listen. I'm feeling old now saying this, but back in the day books were expensive. Books bought were there to read multiple times. The once only were from the library.
I relistened a series from Audible this year, before moving to the newest edition and it was a very nice binge listen.
I will probably never read all my audibles again, but I keep them safe: if I ever fall on hard times, I will have a wealth books to keep me going.


As for Harry Potter... Jim Dale is great, but I'm holding out for Stephen Fry. Someday I'll get my grubby paws on the British editions.


O yes, Christopher Timothy's narration is a treat!

Brideshead Revisited - So well-written with a wistful sense of lost youth and an ambivalent longing for a way of British life.
Macbeth, Othello - Originally I was dragged kicking and screaming to Shakespeare and then the worm turned and I was hooked. Keep it up, all you English and literature instructors out there.
Dune - This book holds up over the years. Immersive before we had A.R.


On Canaan's Side by Sebastian Barry, also read by Donada Peters.
And for comfort, Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot mysteries as long as David Suchet is narrating, although I've also enjoyed Hugh Fraser.

Audiobooks that I have listened to more than once:
Vanity Fair by Thackeray, narrated by John Castle. Love it!
A Tale of Two Cities by Dickens, narrated by Simon Vance; I listened to this a second time because I didn't much like it the first time around (despite loving the book). I thought it might have been because I was new to audiobooks my first time around but unfortunately it is not one of Vance's best narrations...
She Stoops to Conquer by Goldsmith, a full cast production by L.A. Theatre Works. Such a funny play...
A Christmas Carol by Dickens, the Tim Curry version, I have listened to every year since I got it in 2012.
and a couple of mysteries/thrillers:
The Murder at the Vicarage by Christie, narrated by Richard Grant
The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown, narrated by Paul Michael; another one in which I was trying to decide if I was originally mistaken in my impression (this time of the book rather than the narration).
Overture to Death by Ngaio Marsh, narrated by Wanda McCaddon. This was an Overdrive library book that I had forgotten that I had already listened to! But I liked it well enough to listen again rather than just return it.

I also relisten to Company of Liars and anything read by Juliet Stevenson


Yay, HP&Fry :)
Meanwhile, I can add the Simon Serrailler series by Susan Hill. Currently relisten those, narration is very good.



Well worth reading and re-reading, and not as scary as you might think.

Attempting Normal by M.Maron
Norwegian Wood by Murakami
Why? I guess I just felt more than once like listening to them again.

I too enjoy relistening to the JD Robb In Death, but also because I've acquired some of the later audiobooks for that series as well.
Oh, and when an author dies, I always relisten to their books. Sortof a tribute thing.

Having said that, I could see a time down the road where I'd want to go back and listen to books I know I loved awhile back but can't remember well. For example, I read several great books as part of a book club about 14 years ago. I could see revisiting some of those sometime in the future.

lol -- I thought about relistening to that as I agree it is excellent. However, I acquired another audiobook edition through SYNC a few years ago so I plan to listen to that one this year instead...




I've done a second listen to the Expanse series and the Dresden Files because they're both so excellent. But now that I do relistens at work I've had the opportunity to listen to many of my favorites a second time.



Ehhhh, you can really stop the series at about any point. And I'd personally recommend not reading the last one -- Gentleman Jole and the Red Queen -- anyway! ;-)

Ehhhh, you can really stop the series at about any point. And I'd ..."
I loved that series but sadly agree about the last one...

It's not in my head canon. All the retconning really ticked me off!

Ehhhh, you can really stop the series at about any point. And I'd ..."
Good to know. Thanks. I'll bounce it up the queue.

Also, some of them were published out of order -- both chronological order and the order they were written. Personally, I prefer reading a series in chronological order, but some people prefer publication order. And then there's the writing order. So the decision of how to read them can be complicated! ;-D
But if you do decide to try them out, the first four books of the main series (chronologically -- and no, I'm not counting Falling Free, which is in the same universe but without any Vorkosigans) are really the most classic of all. It's not like the Dresden books, where the first two were pretty bad. The first two are about Miles Vorkosigan's parents, and the second two are your introduction to Miles as a teenager. So IMHO you'd be best off either starting with Shards of Honour and Barrayar, or with The Warrior's Apprentice and The Vor Game. Then if you like the series, you can move on from there!


LOL -- I just reread the whole series last year or I would be feeling the same way *grin*


Thanks, noted. I'm usually hard core written order, but it sounds like the ones you've mentioned WOULD be a better starting point.

Also, some of them were published out of order -- both chronological order and the order they were written. Personally, I p..."
Thanks for helpful tips! I'm new to this series, so adding Shards of Honor to my TBR to get started!

LOL -- I just reread the whole series last year or I would be feeling the same way *grin*"
I did too! :-)

The publication order would start Shards of Honor, Warrior's Apprentice, Ethan of Athos.
I'd recommend you skip Ethan of Athos. Not only is it full of gay guys, which I know you don't appreciate, but in general it's just not a very good book. And there's no actual Vorkosigans in it anyway.

The publication order would start Shards of Honor, Warrior's Apprentice, Ethan of Athos.
I'd recommend you skip Ethan of A..."
"Not only is it full of gay guys, which I know you don't appreciate"
I'm posting this as a warning to other people that I consider this offensive language. I don't believe in banning people, but this ice is awfully thin.

Don't look at me like that. I have spent many many hours of my life defending LGBT rights far and near. But I'm also an honest reporter when I'm talking to someone about a book or series. If I'm giving someone advice about a book, and I know they have certain likes and/or dislikes, I'm going to tell them about it. I would do the same for someone who doesn't like female protagonists (or male protagonists), or someone who doesn't like sword and sorcery, or whatever.

Don't look at me like that. I ..."
Sounds as though the two of you would be happier elsewhere.
In case you missed it, I'm the moderator, and I find that type of language offencive. Moreover, I'm not real thrilled with your combative response.

What in the world are you talking about, John?
If you want to see some bona fides on my LGBT attitude, just check out my review of For the Killing of Kings, here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
just for starters.
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Totally agree with everything you said. I guess I can understand others wanting to reconnect with "old friends" but for me personally, there are so many new things to discover that I would prefer to use the time to find something new. The same goes for movies as well. I don't own a single movie DVD because I can't see the point in re-watching when there are so many on my list to watch.
I will confess to two books that I did listen to a second time. I was in an audiobook slump...I could find nothing that was either 4 or 5 stars for over 2 months. That frustration lead me back to my only repeat listens as I sought comfort in something known. They are Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal and The Adventure of English