Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
  • GET IT

Next book

THE DEVIL OF NANKING

Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
  • GET IT

This novel of wartime atrocities by the Japanese in China benefits from the narration of two accomplished narrators. Josephine Bailey is haunting as Grey, a young English woman who is obsessed with something she read as a young child about the 1937 massacre in Nanking. Grey is determined to track down the truth of what happened and goes in search of a survivor who is now a visiting professor in Japan. Simon Vance is the calm, introspective, but equally obsessed, professor, who reads from his journal of the days leading up to and subsequent to the massacre. The two threads of the plot are kept appropriately disconnected by Bailey's narrating both sides of the dialogue between Grey and the professor.

Pub Date: Jan. 22, 2005

Duration: 12 hrs, 30 mins

Publisher: Tantor Media

Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

    Next book

    WONDER BOYS

    American colleges are favorable locales for ghastly event and hair-tearing circumstance. There is, for instance, a good deal of pleasure to be had out of professor and past-prodigy Grady Tripp's awful life, as portrayed by Michael Chabon in WONDER BOYS. There is a certain amount of slapstick here, but it's balanced by Chabon's superb portrait of a gale-force mid-life crisis, a soul-destroying albatross of an unfinished novel and the mind-numbing inconsequence of writers' conferences. David Colacci sounds a little starved for oxygen in his reading, but that's not exactly out of keeping with Grady Tripp's personal gestalt.

    Pub Date: N/A

    Duration: N/A

    Publisher: Brilliance Audio

    Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

    Categories:
      Next book

      QUEEN LUCIA

      Class lurks in varying degrees behind every great English comedy, its ineffable code being so endlessly conducive to ironic subtlety. QUEEN LUCIA, the first of the great Lucia novels of E.F. Benson, is imbued with it. Nonetheless, social striving rather than class per se gives the novel its real comic force. At its center is Lucia, the regnant, self-appointed social and cultural leader of a genteel, middle-class circle. She’s a schemer and poser of awesome theatricality and self-delusion. Although the narrative is conducted in the third person, the characters’ doings, most especially Lucia’s, are as often as not reported in the light in which the perpetrators hope to be viewed. Still, the true facts and motivations, usually base, shine luminously through. Geraldine McEwen’s reading truly enhances the work, being a model of cultivated discretion and ironic pacing.

      Pub Date: N/A

      Duration: 9 hrs

      Publisher: ISIS Audio Books

      Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

      Categories:
        Close Quickview