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MEET ME IN THE FUTURE

STORIES

Traci Odom and Eric Michael Summerer narrate different stories in this collection, but they have something in common. They both are engaging storytellers. These 16 previously published stories gathered together in this audiobook form a disparate vision of the future. Each narrator adopts an easy conversational tone until the stories call for intensity, suspense, or some other form of conflict or tension. Each is faced with depicting a motley assortment of characters such as a body mercenary (whose special talent is switching bodies just before he dies) and a disabled woman who is striving to save a distant settlement. Each is versatile and skilled at portraying memorable characters and making them believable.

Pub Date: Aug. 20, 2019

Duration: 11 hrs

DD ISBN: 9781684574186

Publisher: HighBridge Audio

Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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    SEVENTH SON

    Multipleawardwinner Card is one of the greatest practitioners of science fiction; here he delivers a history fantasy of the Wabash Valley circa 1800, a world of hexes and folk magic. This is the first book about Alvin Maker, the seventh son of a seventh son, who has remarkable psychic powers. Card is a very good narrator, expressive and wellpaced. One can hear the excitement of an author as he brings his own welldescribed characters to life. There is one momentary technical glitch, the only slipup in an exemplary presentation. Highly recommended for fiction collections everywhere.

    Pub Date: N/A

    Duration: 7 hrs

    Publisher: The Literate Ear

    Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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      SECOND FOUNDATION

      Asimov's sweeping tale of the disintegration and fall of the Galactic Empire has never been more relevant or poignant. In the third book of the original trilogy, Dan Lazar handles the material adequately. He uses his limited range of voices nicely, if sometimes amusingly--he sometimes sounds like a foreigner attempting to mimic American accents. Varying pitch and pacing make for a lively narration, and his reading of a precocious young woman, who is ultimately an important figure, is delightful. Technical and editorial problems plague the title. Hearing Lazar repeatedly mispronounce a word that the text itself explains how to pronounce is very frustrating. Intermittent fade-outs on one channel; inconsistencies when switching sides; and low, rumbling background noise mar the sound quality.

      Pub Date: N/A

      Duration: 8 hrs

      Publisher: Books on Tape

      Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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