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Originally Posted by 7gabriel5elpher  |
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Nice... thanx. I'll look into that...any you'd recommend? Oh I must say... that one A Million Little Pieces that I listened to.... it was phenomenal... and it's a true documentary kinda thing.... very surreal ending... leaves you in suspense right up to the end! |
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Glad you enjoyed that book, and you mention that it's a novel. It was first released as an auto-biography and the author appeared on Oprah. I think she even used the book in her book club.
Then it was disclosed that the whole thing was a figment of the author's imagination and he was reviled in the media for several weeks.
I'm also an Audible.com fan and if you listen to a lot of books it's the best way to go.
Also, I listen to free books from NetLibrary.com. Our local library subscribes to that service and we use information on our library cards to access the site. Check with your library - chances are they are members also. The only slight disadvantage is that the books have Windows DRM and you need Windows Media Player to transfer the books to a Windows PlaysForSure device.
But, heck, free is the right price, so for about $50 I bought a Creative player and use my office computer to download and transfer the books.
Getting back to the original topic - books - I like police procedurals, espionage, detective, suspense and so on. No sci/fi or fantasy. No romance or touchy feely stuff for me
And having listened to hundreds of books, I've concluded that the narrator is almost more important than the author.
Narrators I like: George Guidall, Scott Brick, Paul Michael. Scott Brick could read the phone book and I would listen to every 100 hours of it.
Margaret