Best of the Year 24
Presenting our Audiobook of the Year, plus an obsessively curated selection of editor and listener favourites –
each one boasting a standout, not-to-be-missed performance – to help you find your next great listen.

Audiobook of the Year

Our Top 20

Amy Tintera
The podcast "Listen for the Lie" is the star of this comedy/thriller. Listener alert! Once you start listening, you won’t stop. It’s not every day that a woman wanders the streets covered with her best friend’s blood. January LaVoy and Will Damron work their narrator magic to the hilt.

Tanya Talaga
Talaga treads through dusty church basements and other unlit corners of history in this deeply personal endeavor to surface documents that expose the multigenerational genocide of Indigenous communities in the residential school system. Narrated by the acclaimed Anishinaabe writer herself, the journey ultimately leads to her long-lost grandmother.

Lily Chu
Chu blends the sharp edges of rivalry with the soft sweetness of romance for a uniquely entertaining romp about two Toronto journalists reluctantly teaming up to investigate a scandal. Chu’s longtime narrator Phillipa Soo is joined by actor John Cho for this dual-narrated novel full of intrigue and humour.

Percival Everett
A reimagining of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn told from Jim’s perspective, James puts a radical spin on one of the most frequently debated American satires of all time, cleverly subverting racist stereotypes. Narrator Dominic Hoffman expands the story with his melting pot of accents and captivating voice.

Joe White
This star-studded adaptation manages to be faithful to Orwell’s original novel and yet entirely reinvigorating. With lead roles by Andrew Garfield, Cynthia Erivo, Andrew Scott and Tom Hardy, and music composition by Matt Bellamy of Muse (all mixed in Dolby Atmos spatial audio), listeners were double-plus thrilled.

Liane Moriarty
Caroline Lee and Geraldine Hakewell deliver riveting performances in the story of a woman who stands up and predicts the age and cause of death for the passengers aboard her flight, which unfolds into an intricately layered narrative following the passengers as they each deal with the prediction in their own way.

Mae Martin, Sabrina Jalees
Listening to this podcast from comedians Mae Martin and Sabrina Jalees is like sitting in a room with two of your funniest friends, who invite you to have a heart-to-heart on any and all topics, judgment-free. Sex, money, parenting, religion – nothing is out of bounds in this refreshing, no-holds-barred listen.

Lisa Marie Presley, Riley Keough
When Riley Keough agreed to help her mother, Lisa Marie Presley, write her memoir, she had no idea her mother would be gone a month later. This memoir is the deeply moving result of that shared project, beautifully narrated by Keough and Julia Roberts, with voice recordings from Lisa Marie herself.

Dan Aykroyd
Aykroyd is joined by friends and collaborators such as Paul Shaffer and John Landis in this hugely entertaining audio documentary about the Blues Brothers, the iconic musical act Aykroyd created with John Belushi. This listen fills in a lot of blanks, as a great oral history should.

Ashley Elston
The interesting premise in this uber-twisty thriller is that you can tell many lies, but people will remember the first lie. This lie will follow the liar, in this case the main character, Evie Porter. What a life – even though it’s a lie. Narrator Saskia Maarleveld is amazing and very versatile.

Charles Duhigg
Duhigg rocked our world eight years ago with The Power of Habit. In Supercommunicators, the Pulitzer winner does it again, this time with insights on the art of good conversation and how it’s so crucial to the task of connecting with others. Bonus: He narrates this one himself.

Murray Sinclair
In this oral history that centres Indigenous storytelling methods, the Honourable Murray Sinclair shares the story of his life and history-defining career as an activist, senator and judge. A confrontation of the past that offers a path forward, Who We Are is a moving, necessary listen on identity and Reconciliation.

Yuval Noah Harari
Harari once again excels at distilling thousands of years of history into accessible, revelatory observations, this time performed by Vidish Athavale. From oral storytelling to podcasts to AI, Harari traces the great cultural and technological shifts in information-sharing, leaving us mind-blown by his insights.

Sierra Greer
Narrator Jennifer Jill Araya did her homework for this performance: Her subtle shifts in cadence between types of bots adds such dimension to Sierra Greer’s fresh, unexpected take on AI and all the hopes and fears we ascribe to it, resulting in a provocative listen about free will and personhood.

Malcolm Gladwell
Narrating Revenge of the Tipping Point himself, Gladwell revisits and reframes his groundbreaking concepts from 25 years ago. With all of the technological, political and social developments since then, his unique insights into what he calls "contagious phenomena" couldn’t have come at a more critical cultural moment.

Carley Fortune
Fortune transports us to Prince Edward Island, the beautiful backdrop to a forbidden love story between Lucy and Felix. AJ Bridel’s warm performance perfectly complements this heartfelt story, alternating between present day and flashbacks to the summers the couple clandestinely spent together beneath the soaring red cliffs of PEI.

Amy Lin
Lin’s aching reflection on her experience as a young widow is not just a story of tragedy – it’s also a love letter, a cherished portrait of quiet moments and everyday tenderness. Staggering in its vulnerability, Lin’s narration of her own lyrical memoir is likewise unforgettable: unvarnished, stirring and powerful.

Richard Osman
This fantastic new series starter from Richard Osman does not disappoint. A retiree and his daughter-in-law team up to solve murders both global and epic in scale. The dialogue is punchy, fast-paced and smart, making this listen completely impossible to put down thanks to Nicola Walker's adroit and vibrant narration.

Gin Sexsmith
Sexsmith's debut novel is an urgent and razor-sharp literary thriller that follows Delilah, a Mohawk woman who inflicts bloody retribution in the name of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls. Narrator Devery Jacobs’s tender performance is a poignant counterpoint to the violence swirling through Delilah’s world.

Luis Elizondo
Luis Elizondo, the former Pentagon official who ran a secret program investigating UFOs, is knocking listeners’ socks off with his self-narrated memoir, an undeniably ripping account. From Area 51 to the notorious "Tic Tac" objects spotted in the USS Nimitz encounter, it’s all here.

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Explore more of the best of the year

Our favourite interviews and podcasts, plus narrator and staff picks.

Listener favourites from around the world

Explore the picks that are delighting listeners abroad.