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Love it or Leave it, What to do when you can't stand the Narrator


Only once found the narrator so "unlistenable" I couldn't even finish the book and returned it.
Funnily enough this was an old favourite I had read a while back and I wanted to reread, so maybe he just didn't read it how I had visualised it all those years ago!






I must start doing this!


I don't force myself to listen to a narration that I really dislike. I do listen to the excerpts offered at Audible, Tantor, OverDrive (pub library) and other sources of audiobooks before buying, but I sometimes still make a bad choice. And sometimes the sample isn't enough to decide that the narrator isn't going to be enjoyable. It's nice that now Audible, at least, will let you return a book you hate - they didn't always do that.


I eventually got into the story, and the narration really improved once the story moved along and the character's personalities evolved a little.
Now I have listened to the second in the series and am about to begin the third.


Do you listen anyway?
Do you just buy the book?"
A) I never buy an audiobook. For me, the ultimate experience of any book is still to read it. Not that I don't listen to audiobooks, because I listen to them a lot, but if I'm going to buy it, I'm going to buy the book. For audiobooks, I go through Overdrive and just check stuff out.
B) I absolutely put it down if I can't deal with the narrator. If I am excited about the book, I'll check it out from the library/buy it and just read it the old fashioned way. If I'm not that excited about the book, I may never get to it.

Do you listen anyway?
Do you just buy the book?"
No way - I never buy such audiobook, rather chose the paper book. Good example of such narrator is Scott Brick..


I tried listening to FINAL CUT. The first in the new FBI series Catherine Coulter is writing. Renee Raudman isn't a bad narrator, but MacCleod Andrews is a terrible reader. That is one of the reasons I never finished the NEXT ALWAYS series. I returned FINAL CUT to Audible and got my money back.
I wish the narrators were vetted better, then that way better narrators could be chosen to read the books of our favorite authors.

Do you listen anyway?
Do you just buy the book?"
I used to just trudge my way through listening to the audio, but not anymore. If I can't stand the narrator the audiobook goes back and I pick up the book at the library or buy it.
I agree with the others - the narrator is a personal thing. I couldn't stand the woman who read the Debbie Macomber books (too monotone and phone operator-sounding) or the guy who read Marcus Zusak's I Am the Messenger. I made my way through the first but stopped listening to the second after just two tracks. (And I LOVED the woman that read the Alan Bradley Flavia series! lol)

If I don't like the narrator, then I don't "read" the book in any format.
Not as bad as it sounds as I have still have over 100 books I already own and lots more on my TBR and various wish lists.
I always listen to the samples before I buy...sometimes if it's a new narrator, I'll listen to samples from several books before I decide to buy the one I want.
So far there hasn't been a narrator bad enough to make me quit a book, but there have been several that after listening to the sample made me not buy the book.
I'm still fairly new to audiobooks compared to some here, and I've only listened to about 100, but that's enough to have a good idea of the main narrators and the ones I like and the ones I don't.








not cant stand the narator but "only" bad language and lots of it in books that i dont expect it
im an adult and yes it realy ruins my listen!
i chose less popular audiobooks dont blame me
last ones were the amount of sh** in romance breakble
and in beautiful ruins where is diversity of them
where i like the narator
should i change my book criteria?
fine lit? female narator? only classics?
puting ya aside not in mood now
why am i so sensitive?





The new John Scalzi book Lock Inwith two options for narration is driving me batty. I have not selected the book yet because I can't decide between the male or female narrators.

I had no problem with that, to me Wil Wheaton IS the voice of John Scalzi, it's a big reason I picked the audio rather than print. However, Audible sent me a code to get both versions, I don't know if it's just because I preordered? If you have that, you could start with one and switch to the other if you weren't happy with it.

There are a few narrators I stay away from because I can't stand their narration. Nor I can stand their voices.
Thank God for the sample button in Audible. There have been a few of my favorite Nora Robert's books I wanted listen, did not get them because of the chosen narrator.
I wish better the publishers or agents would pick better narrators. It would help in not so many books be rejected by audiobook listeners.

I try to find several samples of the same book to listen to. My reason for this is two-fold: (1) Audible usually grabs something fairly random as their sample and the compression (sound quality) on the samples often distorts how the narrator sounds; (2) I usually get more bits and pieces to judge by.
For example: one of the projects I recently worked on has three narrators. Audible has two versions of the book up, and two different samples. One if of the versions has a snippet of one us (the least representative of how the book actually sounds after that first tiny bit) and the other version has a snippet of one of the other narrators. If listeners click on both, they will at least get to hear 2/3 of us :) Once the book sample is up on another service (Downpour, Audiobooks.com, Overdrive), listeners might get yet more clips to judge by - might even get to hear the third narrator if they are willing to pop around to other sites.
Seems cumbersome, but might provide y'all with a bit of relief from the surprise of a narrator you just can't live with for the duration of a book. Definitely has saved me (as a listener) several times.

I listen to as many samples as possible before I buy but I've still ended up with some stinkers. Those were pretty much because of the story though.


HBJ

Probably the one who bothered me the most was the narrator of Island Beneath The Sea by Isabel Allende. Blair Brown had been the perfect narrator for Allende's books but for some reason they didn't use her for this one.

This reminds me listening to "Crime and Punishment" narrated by I forget who. I thought the narration was so uninspired and pedestrian that, in a way, I was able to concentrate on the text more. And I realized I either didn't like the book or didn't like the translation! I sometimes feel that way in the theatre. A great performance sweeps you into it, but a really bad performance can make the play stand out in your mind, and you begin saying the lines differently in your head.

It's funny the things that drive you batty. I can no longer get the Kevin Hearne books in audio due to the narrator's opinion on what the wolfhounds sound like. It actually makes me jump every time. Just horrible. I have such bad memories of those that I will never give them another listen.
I'm finding that I am enjoying narrators with accents. Maybe because I hear nothing but the flat westcoast 'no' accent all day, but I like variety, whether regional US or british, african, whatever. As long as they enunciate, its all good to me.

Just more proof that it's all a matter of personal taste... I love the Iron Druid Chronicles specifically because of Oberon's voice. One man's meat is another man's poison, even aurally I suppose. To each his or her own.

Matthew Brenher, the narrator chosen for the Cynster Sisters Trilogy is driving me crazy. If he could read just a bit faster, I think I could tolerate this story. I know enunciation is important, but this narrator is taking to a level I am not willing to tolerate.


A few months ago I listened to an audiobook narrated by, let's call her " Jane Doe". However, I could swear the voice was computer generated.
That wouldn't be allowed would it?
Books mentioned in this topic
Miss Benson's Beetle (other topics)A Confederacy of Dunces (other topics)
The Murmur of Bees (other topics)
The Poisonwood Bible (other topics)
Infected (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Spencer Quinn (other topics)Scott Sigler (other topics)
Do you listen anyway?
Do you just buy the book?