As a former radio broadcaster I know that audio is intimate, warm. And being read to is almost primal. It takes us back to when we were children, lulled to sleep by the comforting voice of mom or dad. We were not alone. Not only were our parents there, but so were all those characters, coming alive in our nascent imaginations.
But as an adult, I never really gave audiobooks, or even podcasts, much thought until the pandemic, when I started working out. My God, it was boring. If it was possible to die of ennui, I would have. Until ... I discovered audiobooks! Okay, hardly a discovery, since everyone I knew had been listening for years, but still, a revelation for me. I had company. I was not alone as I ran around the house. (And I don’t mean outside, I mean in the lockdown I ran from the living room, around the kitchen table, then into the bedroom, and back, wearing a track in the carpets.) Suddenly, what had been not just boring but kind of unpleasant became something I looked forward to. The next chapter. And I still listen. As you see, I don’t listen to much fiction, but I do love learning, often obscure things, and mostly choose hefty tomes because, well, they’re a little heavy in paper form. And my exercising doesn’t extend to lifting. - Louise Penny, author of The Grey Wolf.
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Louise Penny's Fave Five
Okay, is this the perfect marriage? Shakespeare and the magnificent Bill Bryson. Would Jane Austen be their love child?
I’d long been told this is a must-read by journalist friends. Finally, I downloaded the audio. It’s the remarkable story of the influence wielded behind the scenes that changed huge numbers of lives, not always for the better.
How fascinating to get to peek into the life of an extremely private public figure.
Okay, maybe Stephen Fry would be the love child of Bryson and Shakespeare. I’ve long loved myths, from all cultures, and who better to bring them alive, and so much more, than this wonderful man. He is such great company, even while I'm gasping on a stationary bike.
Julia Louis Dreyfus is a genius. Such scope, such passion. A wonderful listener with so much to give. And she does. This is warm, human, funny, and thoughtful. Bliss.
Louise Penny is the award winning author of the Chief Inspector Armand Gamache novels.