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The following article was published in our article directory on September 8, 2012.
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Article Category: Advice
Author Name: Laura Hughes
A tricky thing about audio books as car-trip friends can be timing-- you don't want to locate yourself with hours of unplanned alone time or arrive home with the ending a long way down the road.
I learned my lesson first with "Bossy Pants" (Hachette Sound, $ 29.98, 81/2 hours), a memoir read by author Tina Fey. With driving around and paying attention as soon as in my location, Washington, D.C., the book did not last all the way back to Pittsburgh and I felt lost that last hour without it.
After "Bossypants" won two Audio Awards-- best audio book of 2012 and finest biography/memoir-- from the Sound Publishers Association, I decided to stay with the trend of honorees and time them to my next trip to D.C. and back, which, give or take I-270 and Beltway traffic, is up to four hours, automobile time.
Along for the ride were two CD sets purchased online: "Fuzzy Nation" by John Scalzi, told by Wil Wheaton ($ 19.95, Audible, Inc.; 41/2 hours), Audie winner in the sci-fi classification, and fantasy nominee "The Witches of Lublin" by Ellen Kushner, Elizabeth Schwartz and Yale Strom ($ 17, SueMedia Productions; 1 hour), narrated by a cast consisting of Tova Feldshuh, Simon Jones and a guy who is a favorite author with one of my beloved voices, Neil Gaiman.
The haunting, mystical "The Witches of Lublin" was commissioned by the Michigan Festival of Sacred Songs in 2007 and includes music by Mr. Strom. It tells of a Jewish widow (Ms. Feldshuh) in 18th-century Poland who, with her daughters and granddaughter, resists custom by performing popular music for non-Jews to earn money for Passover equippings. There are shades of "Fiddler on the Roofing" when the granddaughter and the son of the non-Jewish overseer fall in love. Characters' faith and mankind are tested, ending in life-and-death choices that determine generations to come.
It's very psychological stuff, and I sniffed a bit when it completed at simply over an hour.
I picked "Fuzzy Nation" due to the fact that I had heard of the book it was based on, a 1962 young person novel, "Little Fuzzy," that was a Hugo Award nominee for best story. For "Fuzzy Country," writer Mr. Scalzi got authorization to update the tale and make it more for a grownup, 21st-century audience, as he describes in the CD set's prologue. His good friend, "Star Trek: The Next Generation's" Mr. Wheaton, tells by usually manifesting the protagonist, a sarcastic Han Solo-esque scoundrel named Holloway. A disbarred lawyer, Holloway has come to be an off-world prospector for a huge mining corporation. He makes two discoveries that alter the stakes: an important deposit of rare minerals and cat-like animals he terms "Fuzzies." The animals could be sapient, which by law can mean an end to the Earth corporation's digging up their planet.
Throw in a dedicated canine who recognizes ways to detonate bombs, Holloway's former love interest and her guy, evil corporate types and their henchmen, shake them up on an occasionally hostile planet, and you have some concept of "Fuzzy Nation." It took me a while to get involved not only in the tale however in Mr. Wheaton's narration. I wished to yell stop the umpteenth time he stated, "Holloway stated" or "Isabel stated" or "Sullivan said," also when it was evident who was speaking. It eradicated the conversation circulation till it began to abate or I got made use of to it.
For me, Mr. Wheaton's voice is comfortingly familiar, because I've followed his career from "Stand By Me" to the Web series "The Guild" to his repeating functions on "The Big Bang Idea" and "Eureka." Everything wrapped up just in time to tune in a Pirates game by means of Sirius XM the rest of the way property.
Next up are uploads of literary fiction champion Hope Davis, reader of "State of Wonder" by Ann Patchett, and multi-award-winning audio reader Simon Vance, delivering brand-new life to "The King's Speech." These were acquired for the Nook Tablet; they cost less than Compact discs and are less hands-on when you're alone in the automobile. Now I need to see if the timing is right.
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