Audiobooks discussion
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Current Reads 2024
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Currently listening to Madness: Race and Insanity in a Jim Crow Asylum and Saint Peter's Fair

I started Corrupted by Lisa Scottoline on the plane home yesterday. It's been a minute since I've read anything by Scottoline.

Now I'm listening to Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives - which is a current group read in my Nonfiction group. It's... less fun. But much more important. :(

Now starting the middle grade book The Misfits #1: A Royal Conundrum by, Lisa Yee Narrated by, Cindy Kay


When I look back it looks like I like her narration of non-fiction better than fiction. Mostly the Laurie Notaro books.



Now starting Everyone Is Watching by, Heather Gudenkauf narrated by, Brittany Pressley

Thanks for this recommendation. Reading it now. Liking it so far....leaning towards four stars.

Thanks f..."
Yay glad to hear it! I am hoping for more books with these characters!

4.5 stars to Romantic Outlaws: The Extraordinary Lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and Her Daughter Mary Shelley
And 4.5 stars to Feed Them Silence - I love Natalie Naudus's narration and I wish this was longer than 4hrs!

I just saw a fun video interview with Mitchell where Dan Snow (History Hit) asks him who his least favorite English monarchs are. The link to the FB video is https://www.facebook.com/reel/1827253.... Hope it works for you!
Meanwhile, I am listening to one of Lucy Worsley's books, The Art of the English Murder: From Jack the Ripper and Sherlock Holmes to Agatha Christie and Alfred Hitchcock. Unfortunately, Lucy isn't the narrator, but the content is still fun.
I am also slogging my way through the huge sci-fi Pandora's Star by Peter F. Hamilton. Not sure I'm going to keep going, as I don't like a single character.


Next I’ll be listening to The Murder on the Links by Agatha Christie

That was me - I listened to it recently and really enjoyed it... as much as that kind of story can be "enjoyed". I thought it was really well written and researched and presented.

it made me violently angry in some places - about the treatment and funding - makes me want to dig some more into JFK's community mental health bill. not at all surprised by some of the politics behind it

Elizabeth Holmes, however well-intentioned, hoodwinked a Who’s Who of America’s political, CEOs, scientific, and Silicon Valley’s elites into bankrolling her medical device that never worked.
Black Wave: Saudi Arabia, Iran, and the Forty-Year Rivalry That Unraveled Culture, Religion, and Collective Memory in the Middle East by Kim Ghattas | audiobook read by Nan McNamara
How did the present day Middle East find itself in such a mess politically, socially, economically and spiritually? Author Kim Ghattas argues its genesis stems from three events in 1979, seemingly independent of each other: the Iranian Revolution, siege of the Holy Mosque in Mecca, and Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. All three happening within the same year was toxic and concocted a brew which still haunts the Muslim and non-Muslim world today. Eye-opening and leaves much to chew on.
The Spirituality of Fasting: Rediscovering a Christian Practice by Charles M. Murphy | 105 pgs
A genteel reminder that fasting was once a key component to Catholicism and the author hopes to revive the practice and dispel of any notion of self-hatred or self-punishment as a motive.




I enjoyed learning the history of traveling library and the women who dedicated their lives to it, however the story of Cussy Mary Carter didn’t really hold my attention.



Dawnlands by Philippa Gregory
This is the third book in a series. I very much enjoyed the first book and this one which are seventeenth century historical fictions. She might write a fourth book, but did not initially plan one.
King: A Life by Jonathan Eig
A new biography of MLK. We're listening to it in the car so it will take forever as its over 20 hours long, but it's excellent. The narrator won an Audie for it his performance.
How to Say Babylon by Safiya Sinclair
It's a young poet's memoir of growing up in Jamaica with strict Rastafarian parents. It's shortlisted for the 2024 Women's Prize for Nonfiction.

Now I am listening to Kitty Cat Kill Sat: A Feline Space Adventure. A cat is the only survivor of a space station and over time acquires a superior mind and with the help of all the medical devices on the ship is practically immortal. She is in orbit around the future Earth, protecting it from threats. But in spite of her achievements, there are still issues like - lack of thumbs makes it hard to operate equipment. Her system of teaching the AI to understand meows isn't perfect. And food is a series of unappetizing pellets. Clever idea but it seems to go on & on. The whole book is 19 hours and I'm not even half done. I wonder if it is supposed to appeal to video gamers, since much of her work consists of maneuvering, shooting, and evading. I'm not sure if I'll finish it. The cover is delightful, though.


I just saw a fun video interview with Mitchell where Dan Snow (History Hit) asks him who his least favorite English monarchs are. The link to the FB video is https://www.facebook.com/reel/1827253.... Hope it works for you!"
Sorry I missed this! I just watched it and enjoyed it quite a lot. David Mitchell just rattling off facts like this will just never cease to impress me, even though I know that he's likely spent an immense amount of time learning them. Is that what having a working brain is like??

I started Anna Karenina this afternoon, narrated by Wanda McCaddon. It's already so dramatic and extra and I'm enjoying myself lol


I look forward to hearing what you think!






I finished...
Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives
Smoke Gets in Your Eyes & Other Lessons from the Crematory
You Sound Like a White Girl: The Case for Rejecting Assimilation
and I'm about 75% done with The End of Policing



Hooo boy I was NOT prepared for this one. Not reading the blurb got me again (I assume - I still haven’t read it lol). I was expecting a sort of “waiter rant” type book about different cleans and traumas that necessitated them. I was NOT expecting a story of a trans woman and the horrific abuse and neglect she endured as a child. It literally took my breath away at one point in my walk and I had to stop and regain my composure. 🥺


Half finished with Swamp Kings: The Story of the Murdaugh Family of South Carolina and a Century of Backwoods Power by, Jason Ryan narrated by, Joe Hempel this one gives more of a family background/History than previous books I've read and shows I have seen on the Murdaughs.

Wrong Place Wrong Time?
I quite enjoyed that one (if that’s the one you mean!).

Now I’m listening to Making It So: A Memoir. Quite good so far!


Personal accounts of that fateful day.

The House on Biscayne Bay by Chanel Cleeton | read by Caroline Hewitt & Frankie Corzo | Review
Gorgeous Miami setting and a nice mystery early 20th century.
The Ink Black Heart by Robert Galbraith | read by Robert Glenister | Review
What an ending, Heart stopping! Masterfully done.
The Force by Don Winslow | read by Dion Graham | Review
The language, the cadence are true to the city - beautiful and brilliantly written.




Personal accounts of that fateful day."
i read this not listened - but is one of the best oral histories i've read


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