This review is for the audiobook version.
You often hear authors refer to their books as babies. As I write this, I have a 7YO and my wife is 8.5 months pregnant. Broadly speaking, comparing books to babies is a somewhat accurate, if not self-centered, analogy. At its most granular analysis, there is the process of creation and the nerve-wracking moment(s) of bringing something you love into the world. Something that needs to be nurtured and cared for. Something that has no chance of survival without the aid and attention of many others.
In most cases when a book is turned into an audiobook, the author has little to no involvement in the process. In my case, other than the incredibly generosity of Tantor Media allowing me to select my favorite of their narrators, I wasn't involved in the process at all.
The only way I can describe listening to your own book being read to you is this: imagine you willingly give your baby to someone else to raise, and while you are fully aware of it happening and who the surrogate parent is, you have no contact with that child until they reach maturity.
Is it a fair comparison? Maybe, maybe not. Am I being insensitive to anyone? I hope not. Remember, as I write this, my wife is 8.5 months pregnant, so my mind is a tad preoccupied.
Let's go with it. In this situation, the parent can do nothing but cross their fingers and hope for the best.
And that brings me to Painter of the Damned and its surrogate parent, Zac Aleman.
Quite simply, I hit the jackpot with Zac. I've listened to dozens of audiobooks and he is far and away the best narrator I've heard. Narration is an artform, and a difficult one at that. There are so many nuances. To name a few: pacing, consistency, emotion (without being too emotive), capturing the author's meaning and sentiment, accents, voices, and more. And all of that needs to be done over 15-20 hours of speaking. My mouth shrivels after reading aloud for just 10 minutes.
Zac Aleman's reading of Painter of the Damned is brilliant. And when a difficulty level is applied, I can confidently say it's the best performance I've ever heard. Painter of the Damned spans two countries, multiple time periods, dozens of characters of all ages and genders, and at least five distinct accents. He's a one-man show destined for greatness.
I cannot rave about him enough.
Thank you, Zac!