Audible Island Books
Erik Burns
eburns at gmail.com
Mon Jan 18 12:36:26 CST 2016
The readings of Gaddis (the recognitions and J R) are fantastic.
-----Original Message-----
From: "Steven Koteff" <steviekoteff at gmail.com>
Sent: 1/18/2016 18:16
To: "Mark Kohut" <mark.kohut at gmail.com>
Cc: "Allan Balliett" <allan.balliett at gmail.com>; "pynchon -l" <pynchon-l at waste.org>
Subject: Re: Audible Island Books
That's a great suggestion, Mark.
I don't do audiobooks very often but I'm partial to ones where the author reads his/her own work.
I doubt he gets much love on here but I think certain sections of Hitchens reading his memoir are very good/moving.
Think about the format. I usually save audiobooks for things where the language (and the physical act of reading it typeset) is maybe less of a focus--things that are less stylized, or that have their linguistic integrity compromised by translation, etc. So with audiobooks I lean disproportionately to non-fiction or lighter fare. I usually end up saving the format for books I'm semi-interested in, but not necessarily enough so to spend my precious desk-time with. Or for books I absolutely love and need to consume in another format (hence Irons's Lolita's appeal).
The first Knausgaard book on audio is decent--at first I thought the guy reading it was overwrought but developed some affection for it.
I heard a good audiobook of Anna Karenina once. I can imagine a perfect reading of Proust.
Go for something that has elements of orality/yarnness.
If there's anything of Barry Hannah reading his work...
On Mon, Jan 18, 2016 at 11:45 AM, Mark Kohut <mark.kohut at gmail.com> wrote:
if still available, Jeremy Irons reading you LOLITA is unforgettable.
On Mon, Jan 18, 2016 at 12:29 PM, Allan Balliett <allan.balliett at gmail.com> wrote:
I can't believe my powers have recall have sunk so low today, but here's a manifestation of the problem:
I have credit for two audio books at Audible right now and have to use them by the end of the day and, although I admit that everything I want cost $7 or less cash(33 1/3's "Low", for example) but the credits cost $15 each and can 'buy' recordings valued to over $50 each, so every purchase counts and I'm hesitant to 'just buy something.'
I also have, for example, all the P titles that are in audiobook on audible snd most of the Jim Harrison (incl several never listened to) and many many more.
Listens are more for working in the greenhouse than for driving.
Leaning towards that recent title that's about a 'non fiction' love affair with an octopus but fear it may be more whimsical than real.
Open to suggestions, you don't even have to check Audible before checking
I'm going to go sit in front of some bright lights
Thanks in advance.
=Allan in WV
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