Next book

THE HA-HA

Richard Poe’s voice, gritty, tough, with an edge of cynicism, has the staccato rhythms of a complex and troubled man. That man, Howard Kapotash, the narrator, who was senselessly wounded by a mine 16 days into his Vietnam tour, has been unable to speak, write, or read in the 30 years since. Though imprisoned by silence, he is nonetheless asked by his old girlfriend, Sylvia, to watch her 9-year-old son, Ryan, while she goes for a stint at drug detox. In the painful interior monologue that follows, baseball, breakfast waffles, and betrayal batter Howard into finding his humanity again. King’s debut as a novelist moves us without sentiment to feel deeply for a man whose crying need to communicate enables him finally to do so.

Pub Date: Jan. 22, 2005

Duration: 12 hrs, 45 mins

Publisher: Recorded Books Inc.

Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

Categories:

    Awards & Accolades

    Our Verdict

    • Our Verdict
    • GET IT

    Next book

    & SONS

    Awards & Accolades

    Our Verdict

    • Our Verdict
    • GET IT

    This audiobook is initially daunting. Sixteen hours long and constructed of subtle—at times, even confusing—shifts in point of view, it may feel overwhelming in the first hour. But sticking with George Newbern’s narration and Gilbert’s prose yields great rewards. Newbern’s performance is funny, thoughtful, heartrending, and utterly engrossing. When the famous, now aging, author A.N. Dyer calls his distant sons to his side, Newbern is provided ample characters to animate, and he does so with perfect pacing and what seems like an innate understanding of the novel. He creates a rhythm that makes the changing perspectives easy to follow and Gilbert’s details accessible. & SONS is a perfect example of how a skilled narrator can make a good book even better.

    Pub Date: July 23, 2013

    Duration: 16 hrs, 15 mins

    DD ISBN: 9780385359566

    Publisher: Random House Audio

    Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

    Categories:
      Next book

      'ROUND MIDNIGHT

      Following multiple lives over six decades, this is a story of cultural shifts, the effects of racial prejudice, and family secrets. Joy Osmanski's narration is engaged and easy to listen to. There are times when her narration is uneven and character accents are inconsistent, but she moves the story along at an excellent pace. Will Damron capably narrates a few descriptive paragraphs at the beginning to set the scene. During the '50s, as bombs are explode in Nevada's deserts to entertain Las Vegas tourists, four sets of characters experience the destruction caused by prejudice and social upheaval in their lives. The author skillfully integrates the lives of vivid and realistic characters, bringing them to a satisfying and surprising denouement in the final chapters.

      Pub Date: May 2, 2017

      Duration: 11 hrs, 15 mins

      DD ISBN: 9781508234715

      Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio

      Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

      Categories:
        Close Quickview