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I used to listen while I walked on the treadmill or used the Nordic Trak and then the pace was fine. I probably pay more attention to the details on an audiobook than when I read myself... I get impatient and tend to skim, although I'm trying to cure myself of that.


I keep misplacing my headphones, otherwise I'd also be finished with The Book Thief.
I spend ninety minutes a day commuting. Audiobooks feed my desire to read and not "waste time" just driving.

I almost always sample an audio-book before a purchase as so much of the enjoyment depends on the reader. However, when the slower reading rate combines with a ponderous writing style I too find myself drifting off and having to rewind.


I have favourite narrators and I agree they can make or break a book. Listening to a sample is a good idea, I hadn't done that before!
Luckily, our library system has NetLibrary access - which gives me something like 12,000 ebooks and audiobooks to choose from, for free, they are licensed to the device you download them to for 21 days and won't play after that unless you renew the license. Its a good system. I tend to 'borrow' books that I might have trouble reading - classics or books that have odd language or dialect. I have tried to listen to non-fiction but my mind wanders too much, so I have to stick to fiction.
As someone else commented earlier, I think I often get more out of an audio book, because I listen to every word, whereas when I am reading, I tend to skim the 'boring' bits.


The actor who does the narration for the Harry Potter books is also really good (his name escapes me at the moment).
I also discovered that I like listening to audiobooks while I knit. Most knitting doesn't take that much concentration and can even be a little boring at times. :)

YES, thank you! He was also the narrator on the canceled-too-soon Pushing Daisies (not to hijack the thread).

Even trained voices can have elements that wear on me though. Some are boring - they'll read a sentence with an exclamation mark like it was part of a grocery list. Others just irritate me. Likely a personal problem on my part, but it still happens occasionally.
Long footnotes in audio books are NOT good, as I found when trying to listen to Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell. I found the book boring to read, so tried the audio book, which sometimes works better. Unfortunately, this book has a lot of footnotes & some are several pages long. By the time the reader got back to the original story, I was lost! In the book, I could go back, skim a bit & get back on track. Not really workable when I'm driving & listening to an audio book.

Oooh, I'll have to try that! My knitting and crocheting time is spent in front of the TV catching up on Lost, Prison Break and Torchwood episodes.
I've added Infected to my shelf. It sounds like a fun and gory thrill ride.
I liked Joe Lansdale's review at the author's site:
"Scott Sigler's Infected is a bucking pulp pony that throws you this way and that, and just when you think you've got your balance, that ole pony bucks the other way. All in all, one hell of an exhilarating ride, and highly recommended."
—Joe R. Lansdale, World Horror Convention Grand Master and six-time Bram Stoker Award-winning author of Bubba Ho-Tep and Lost Echoes

Unfortunately, a LOT of knitting time is doing almost the exactly same thing (for me it's Supernatural, Lost and the dearly departed Battlestar Galactica). But the audiobooks are pretty good for that, too.
edit: I'll post a short review of Infected when I'm finished.

Listening while I stitch is great, but I haven't been stitching lately, so that is out too. I'm hoping to get back to it before too long.

Actually Jim Dale was the US reader. Stephen Fry read the UK audio release. I ended up with the UK version of book 4 and really enjoyed his reading.
I personally love audio books. I enjoy how they make you slow down and enjoy instead of racing through everything. I use them when I'm commuting (60-90 min each way), chores and often in the evenings. I guess I might be weirtd, but I like sitting in a darkened room doing nothing but listening. It reminds me of when I was a kid and my mom or dad would read to me in the evenings. :D
I agree the reader can make or break an audio book. There are a few I have purchased where the reader was so bad that I ended up either buying the book in a different format or finding a different audio release with a different reader and buying it. It hasn't been really common, I don't "hear" voices when I'm eading so I never have character/voice conflicts, but I know it has happened with at least 2 series.
Books mentioned in this topic
Infected (other topics)Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (other topics)
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (other topics)
The Book Thief (other topics)
I'm the same way. The reader always ends up going too slow for me, causing me to lose focus, start thinking about other things, and lose track of the story... then I have to rewind. I tried audio-books a few times during long drives, and it just doesn't work for me.
How about you?