Audiobooks discussion
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Current Reads 2025
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March

I finished up The Bomber Mafia: A Dream, a Temptation, and the Longest Night of the Second World War today - interesting from the perspective of what they developed - but not a fan of the audio, it had too much extra (background noise/music and they spliced in interviews with real people that I found to be distracting).
I have about 90 minutes left of Last Twilight in Paris
my first official book of March will be Malas

Not sure what I'm going to listen to next!! I'm going away with my daughter for her bday this weekend, so I probably won't start a new audible til sunday/monday...
Excited to see all your guys' choices and then decide :)

Still have two other books going: Gut: The Inside Story of Our Body's Most Underrated Organ by Giulia Enders
and
The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies? by Jared Diamond.
I'm enjoying switching between different audio books. May keep this up.

If it wasn't for Alan Rickman's narration of The Return of the Native, then I think reading it would be the better choice. However, I would probably still resort to Cliff Notes for support!!



I gave The Bone Shard Daughter by Andrea Stewart a good chance, but this was a disappointment. Unfinished.
Maybe I'm just having a down week! Back to an easy-to-read fantasy series I like, The Isles of the Cutlass Sea by Torsten Weitze.

I started Malas, as well as Seatmate and Podkayne of Mars




this is a series i need to get back to - i enjoyed the first one, while the writing was a bit weak


still working on Malas as well as Podkayne of Mars
next up is Open Season and The DallerGut Dream Department Store

I am now listening to Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and I'm going to start Once There Were Wolves tomorrow.

The Paradise Problem was a cute contemporary romance. Pretty obvious where it would go but the two main characters were interesting and I found myself really enjoying their banter and developing relationship
Long Shadows - the 7th (and last - but I hope not) in the Memory Man series by David Baldacci. Love the main character and his unusual memory that helps him solve crimes. A no-fail series for me - I've liked them all.
Up next is The Seventh Veil of Salome

Now starting The Sirens by Emilia Hart
Narrated by Barrie Kreinik Pub Date Apr 01 2025

Then The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies? by Jared Diamond. Which looked at several areas of life, such as: raising children, dealing with old people, diet, war, etc. He explains how things are in traditional societies and compares to modern, mainly western society.
Then started up Octavia E. Butler: H is for Horse by Chi-ming Yang. This is a biography, mostly of her writing, but of herself as well. It has been describing the content of her early writing as she grew up and into a published author. It's a short book and I'm already 40% through.
The Diamond book was one of the first audio books I purchased, so it felt good to get it done. The same day I bought a bunch, one of those audible sales...and have only one more left from that group. In any case, felt good to get one of the oldest audios finally off the TBR/L.



I also finished up Podkayne of Mars on my commute into the office this morning.
next up is continuing Open Season; as well as DallerGut Dream Department Store


I'm now reading a real compilation of short stories edited by George R.R. Martin and Gardner Dozois called Warriors, the stories are not in a single genre but across genres with a theme of warriors of course. Some are fantasy, some mystery, historical fiction, sci-fi, etc. This one is over 700 pages in print, 31 audio hours, so it contains stories by many authors that are longer than the previous ones I read.

Ha! Now I have the sound loop in my head!! Love Joe Jackson, but I was finally sound loop free for a couple of days.

I’m a bit unhappy with the narrator of the third book, which they probably found by going out on the street and dragging in the first person they saw. Still, it is a very interesting and informative series. Fortunately, we picked them up with Audible’s great sale after Black Friday.

Ha! Now I have the sound loop in my head!! Love Joe Jackson, but I was finally sound lo..."
I had the same reaction Fran! :)

Now listening to a new audio release of The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner. There are multiple narrators woven in, so each character has their own voice.
Also listening to There Are Rivers in the Sky by Elif Shafak. Just one narrator here. I started it in print but realized I can get the audio, so switched over.


Ha! Now I have the sound loop in my head!! Love Joe Jackson, but I was fin..."
A sound loop or an earworm, I don't know what you call it but I finally was song free in my heard after a Peter, Paul and Mary 50 year tribute. Leaving on a Jet Plane! Now Joe Jackson. I buried myself in a book this afternoon.



Gee, what more could we ask for? (Wink) I immediately went to check this one out!
I have been listening to a long series of epic sword and sorcery fantasies called The 13th Paladin (first book is Ahren) by Torsten Weitze. I'm now on the 7th book and there are at least 13 of them. Gildart Jackson does a terrific audio narration of this series, and Tim Casey translated them from German. Unique and likable characters and easy to follow.
I am also listening to Gut: The Inside Story of Our Body's Most Underrated Organ by Giulia Enders, but it's kind of all over the place and I'm losing interest.



Now I've started Nero: Nero Trilogy, Book 1. It has excellent reviews and so far I'm very engaged.

I mention the public library because I support those and have written to my Congressmen before in support of library funding, and again now as the Institute of Museum and Library Services was disbanded by the Administration. I oppose that.
I got the email today from Houston that Out of State library memberships will no longer be renewed, joining the list of libraries that will be cutting services due to the gutting of federal funding. Not to be overtly political here, but I oppose this elimination of federal funding for services that the middle and lower economic classes use with every bit of my being.
"Greetings HPL Cardholder,
We are writing to inform you that, as of April 7, 2025, we will no longer be able to renew your out-of-state resident library card. This decision was made after careful consideration of changes in library funding and operational needs."

I mention the public library because I support those and have w..."
Thanks for posting this. It's a service that will probably not be mentioned in any national coverage.


Support your public libraries, folks, and the politicians who fund them.

The Heaven & Earth Grocery StoreThe Color of Water: A Black Man's Tribute to His White MotherBrooke Shields Is Not Allowed to Get Old: Thoughts on Aging as a Woman
Tuck Everlasting
Currently reading:
Moon Palace
On Beauty

Support your public libraries, folks, and the politicians who fund them."
US libraries today are reaching out to advise members of threats to federal funding which could affect services like Libby or hours, staffing, etc. They encouraged us to contact our representatives.

Now back to Murderbot with Network Effect by Martha Wells. These novellas and one novel are making a lot more sense read in order without the gaps between publishing dates which caused me to forget most of the previous plotline in between books. I love Murderbot!


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Books mentioned in this topic
The Armor of Light (other topics)The Mask of Fear (other topics)
Network Effect (other topics)
The Armor of Light (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Harlan Coben (other topics)Cassandra Campbell (other topics)
Diann Ducharme (other topics)
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Carrying over The Secret Lives of Color, where the author-narration is fine; nor am I missing examples of the colors (shades) themselves. A nonfiction that passes time well, if not outstanding