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MISSING MAY

Summer was a 6-year-old orphan when she met the aunt and uncle who took her home to be their child forever. Six years later when her aunt, May, dies, Summer must find her way alone through the stunned grief both she and her uncle carry inside. Frances McDormand reads Summer's hopeful and confused narration in a slow, Southern cadence, which fully captures her and brings her to life. With a simple delivery, honoring the quiet integrity of Rylant's character, McDormand engages the reader in Summer's struggle to convey the intensity of her relationships with her uncle and aunt. A variety of music, much of it Southern mountain folk music, is effectively employed to emphasize moods in the text.

(Fiction. 11+)

Pub Date: Jan. 22, 1996

Duration: 3 hrs

Publisher: Random House Audio

Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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    "WHEN DID YOU SEE HER LAST?"

    ALL THE WRONG QUESTIONS, BOOK 2

    While narrator Liam Aiken evokes the wistful, dolorous tone of Snicket’s second mystery in his All the Wrong Questions series, he fails to deliver Snicket’s signature snark with appropriate vigor. In this episode, the main character, 12-year-old Lemony Snicket, continues the investigations that began in STAIN’D BY THE SEA with the case of the missing chemist, Cleo Knight. As Aiken delivers Snicket’s declarative sentences in a deadpan voice, his remote reading keeps listeners distant from the story. Furthermore, Aiken does not always play up the quirks of the town’s eccentric characters. When he does use individualized voicings, the story shakes off its languidness to some degree. Aiken’s melancholy narration echoes Snicket’s loneliness but doesn’t enliven the recording for young listeners. An attached PDF file includes the character Seth’s illustrations.

    (Mystery. 8-14)

    Pub Date: Oct. 15, 2013

    Duration: 4 hrs

    DD ISBN: 9781478924845

    Publisher: Hachette Audio

    Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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      1919

      THE YEAR THAT CHANGED AMERICA

      Jeff Harding voices the many impactful moments of 1919 in this engaging nonfiction audiobook. From women activists fighting for the right to vote to the Red Scare and civil rights riots, Sandler draws parallels to today's social issues. Harding matches 1919's cadence with a forward-moving pace. He uses different accents for quotations, though the women and people of color might have been better served with a diverse cast. The asides and timelines that appear in the text also are in the audio. Full of fascinating stories put into a modern context, this audiobook offers much to learn about an eventful year and ponders the big questions of our current time.

      (Nonfiction. 11-16)

      Pub Date: Jan. 22, 2020

      Duration: 5 hrs, 30 mins

      Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

      Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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