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BLAMELESS

Mary, a divorced school-bus driver, is the key witness to a child's death, which has shaken her up, but she can still play amateur baseball, during a game of which she develops a yen for a player on the other team, who turns out to be father to one of her riders, though not a rider in her old Mercury, but when she was six . . . . What difference does any of this make when Carrington McDuffie serves it up with such lifeless melancholy that the audio becomes unremittingly dreary?

Pub Date: Jan. 22, 2000

Duration: 7 hrs, 30 mins

Publisher: BBC Audiobooks America/ Chivers

Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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    A CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR'S COURT

    Mark Twain's ironic tale follows a man from the nineteenth century who travels back in time to the sixth century. Narrator Nick Offerman's deep voice is at once familiar. He uses his natural voice for the narrator, the Connecticut Yankee, who speaks in a likable tone and distinctly American accent. However, Offerman is especially surprising in his flawless transition from the measured American speaker to the cadenced speech of the sixth-century British characters. He achieves a range of British dialects, and his voice completely transforms in these vocal characterizations. Offerman's distinct contrast between the informal narrator and the elevated sixth-century language enhances the conversational exchanges. Offerman's performance is fitting to Mark Twain, who even mentions in the novel how essential dialects are in helping the reader to distinguish individual characters.

    Pub Date: Jan. 22, 2017

    Duration: 13 hrs, 30 mins

    Publisher: Audible, Inc.

    Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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      ANTHEM

      Ayn Rand's Anthem is a short dystopic novel about a man who escapes a society from which all individuality has been squeezed. Its allegory is crudely transparent, and the ideas have lost their political urgency. (The book was published in 1938, a decade before Orwell's 1984.) But Anthem provides a good introduction to Rand's philosophy of "objectivism," which is built on individuality, freedom, and reason. Paul Meier is an excellent choice for the novel's first-person narrator--he manages to maintain an urgency in his voice, pleading but never whining, mirroring the main character's struggle against his totalitarian world.

      Pub Date: Jan. 22, 2002

      Duration: 2 hrs, 30 mins

      Publisher: HighBridge Audio

      Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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