Romance Audiobooks discussion
Audiobook Discussions
>
Dual Narrators frustration
date
newest »



I second your peeve.


But I prefer male narrators overall - I like my men to sound manly and I can still hear a woman pretending to be a man in most female narrations. I really don't care how the woman sounds unless the voice is horrible.

What's the point?
I was expecting the male narrator to read the male characters and the female narrator perform the female (or kids, if any) characters. But no, each narrator does both.
I'm sure it costs more money to hire two narrators, in which case, it's a waste of money as far as I'm concerned. Might as well do it properly and have them perform the gender-relevant roles or save money and stick to one narrator!
As for male or female narrators, I far prefer males because I find their voices more soothing and when it's a romantic suspense, a male adds to the suspenseful atmosphere. There are good female narrators I like, Carol Shneider, for example, but a lot of female narrators have high, nasal voices which are hard on my ears.


I think I still have a couple of dual narrations in my audible library but they have been moved to the bottom of the TBR

I think I got a little spoiled by the Fever books. It was my first experience with a dual narration and I kind of expected them to all be that way. I wish they were.
I wonder if sometimes (when it comes the accent/dual narrator issue) maybe the female reader is very good with accents and the male is not, or visa versa, if it creates some issues.


At one time, I really truly didn't care for this type of narration as it required me to learn two sets of characters voices. But with good narrators, I've come to appreciate it.
Of course, I'd love to hear more of the whole Phil/Natalie type of thing!

comfort wrote: "I prefer dual narration to a poor one person narration."
Agreed. Also, the female needs to stick to all the female voices and the male to all the male voices. That way it is clear.
Agreed. Also, the female needs to stick to all the female voices and the male to all the male voices. That way it is clear.


I've also listened to Lisa Gardner's D.D. Warren series which has two female narrators - one for the main character in 3rd person and one for the secondary character in 1st person. It took me a while to get used to the change in voices but once I did, I could see the logic in making the distinction between the narratives clearer.
My preference is for female narrators, especially in romance. Most of the male narrator's I've listened to mangle the female voices - David DeVries in Libriomancer is particularly awful. James Marsters is one exception though - he does the female voices really well.


This is usually done when the book are written with alternating chapters from the female and male 1st person POV (happens a lot in YA and NA), so you see where they are coming from.
Dual narrators were essential in My Name Is Memory to keep up with the time changes and shifting roles in addition to the genders.

That definitely makes more sense. However, doesn't it become confusing when different narrators provide the voices for the same characters?

It would be great if they could all be like the Fever books, or at least a few now and then. I'm wishing that KMM will have the first 3 Fever books re-recorded some day with Phil and Natalie just so the series will be consistent, and because BloodFever is my favorite.

No, it's not confusing if the clues to the characters are there i.e. Julie said, Patrick exclaimed, etc. Also, a lot of times these characters live in their heads so it doesn't matter as much. But as some others have mentioned, if one of the narrations is better than the other, it makes for an uneven listen.
(this is the first topic I have started, I hope it's alright that I did)
Going to keep this short but bittersweet;
What is the point of having dual narrators if they are both reading the story by themselves and it's broken down by chapter or POV? Why can't they be done the way that Natalie Ross and Phil Gigante did KMM's last 3 books in the fever series?
I like dual narrators when they interact with each other but I don't see the point if they are separated. I'd rather listen to one person do all the voices so it's consistent. And in that case I'd nearly always prefer women because I hate most male narrator's female voices and a lot of female narrators do very good male voices (IMHO). And if you are going to have them read each chapter or POV separately then at least make the voices close to each other. Either someone has an accent or they don't.
I'm assuming the problem is logistical and financial. I wonder if they have to be in same studio to make it work and if everyone is working from home it becomes impossible?
(Rambled enough. Just wanted to see if anyone found this as annoying as I do)