Wow, it is awesome. The voice actors for the characters are excellent, as is the narrator of the descriptive portion of the text.
Unlike a straight audio play, the entire book is read to you. They just add sound effects and each character is voiced by an appropriately sounding actor.
I do like fantasy and science fiction, but am open to most genres. Anyone have some recommendations for audio-books like this?
It’s about 12 hours and covers the entire 3 book series, but it has actual actors doing the parts (Ian Holm is Frodo for example).
I had a cross-country drive ahead of me and needed something that wasn’t the radio, so I checked this out at the library from my college. It was pretty neat.
Interesting. I doubt they read the entire book aloud and managed to voice-act it in 12 hours. More of an audio play, then?
I may try some audio plays like that as well(Hitchhiker’s Guide, etc.), so please feel free to recommend them. I was mainly talking about fully book texts that utilize actors and sound effects.
The book was written as a series of interviews with survivors of the aftermath of a zombie apocalypse. In the audio book, various actors perform the roles of the interviewees.
Check which version you’re getting. When the book was first published, an audiobook was also released. But this first audiobook contained only an abridged version of the book. When the book became a bestseller, a second audiobook was released which contained the complete text.
The BBC Lord of the Rings is indeed an audio drama, with dialog in some scenes not taken from the books. It is, however, just the thing for a very long drive.
You’re looking for “full cast” audiobooks (that are not dramatizations or abridgments), right?
I haven’t listened to any of the following, but, judging by their descriptions, examples would include The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman The Bad Beginning by Lemony Snicket The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman
The Redwall books by Brian Jacques
This version of Dracula (which I have listened to and can recommend) might also qualify, though there aren’t really sound effects; it’s just different narrators reading different sections of the book.
The kind of book where different chapters are read by different narrators sounds like not quite the kind of thing you’re looking for, but there are plenty of those out there as well.
I know that Audible has/had “Dune” and some of the Ursula Le Guin Earthsea books in full-cast format… both of them including Scott Brick in the cast.
I think that they’re not strict about always having the same actor read all a character’s dialog, maybe because that makes the recording/production more difficult to arrange. (IE either having the actors available to record at the same time or leaving gaps where the other actor can read in.) So often they go scene-by-scene instead, picking the major or POV character for a scene and having that actor read everything, including the dialog there. It’s still pretty cool to listen to that way.
ETA: Also, the Escape Artists (Escape Pod, Podcastle, and, I assume, Pseudopod) often release shorter stories with full-casts, for free.
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy radio shows are excellent. At least, the Primary and Secondary Phases are. Phases three through five were made decades later, with much of the original cast, but they’re just not as good.
There’s a full cast version of Neil Gaiman’s American Gods. No sound effects, but it’s still quite good.
There’s also the Star Wars radio drama, which was excellent. Full cast, sound effects, it even has Mark Hamill as Luke for ANH and ESB. I think Billy Dee Williams also reprised his role as Lando.
If you can’t get enough Star Wars, there’s also the Dark Forces drama. It’s nowhere near as good, though, so I can’t recommend it unless you’re starving for more Star Wars after finishing the main radio program.
Max Brooks as The Interviewer
Nathan Fillion
Paul Sorvino
Carl Reiner
Jay O. Sanders
Martin Scorsese
Simon Pegg
Denise Crosby
Bruce Boxleitner
Jeri Ryan
Henry Rollins
Mark Hamill
Eamonn Walker
Jürgen Prochnow
David Ogden Stiers
Alan Alda
Rob Reiner
Dean Edwards
Frank Darabont
Parminder Nagra
Masi Oka
John Turturro
Alfred Molina
Common
F. Murray Abraham
Rene Auberjonois
The audiobook for Emma Donoghue’s Room has, as I recall, four different actors playing all the roles. The voice of Jack is pretty annoying, and makes up about 70% of the audio, so let that factor into your decision. I got used to it pretty quickly.
This thread reminds me that I’ve always meant to buy Patrick Stewart reading A Christmas Carol. I know he did a stage version of this, and to promote it, he guested on some talk shows and read a paragraph or two from the book. At that time, I heard him read the description of the pawn shop where Scrooge’s posthumous belongings were fenced. Very, very good stuff.
There are unabridged audio versions of the Discworld books. The earlier ones are read by Nigel Planer (familiar to some as Neil from “The Young Ones”) and the later ones by Stephen Briggs, both of whom do a good, satisfying job.
I believe that there have been BBC radio plays based on at least a few of the Discworld books, but I’m not sure where to get them or how good they are.