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THE CASE FOR BOOKS

PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE

Each chapter of this work comes from an essay the author wrote for the NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS. Every section introduces loads of information, but the resultant lack of continuity from one to another and the many redundancies prove annoying. The largest ax Darnton grinds is the monopoly Google has gained to digitize all the world's written information. Aside from the pitfalls of digitization the author enumerates, Google pays nothing and plans to sell the access for a profit. Narrator David Henry brings little to the reading. He struggles painfully with the French and German and seems to run an unnecessary race to the finish. His rendition of the occasional poetry ineptly conceals that it is just that. Can we forgive this essayist for never mentioning audiobooks?

Pub Date: Jan. 22, 2009

Duration: 5 hrs, 30 mins

Publisher: PublicAffairs

Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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    100 THINGS WE'VE LOST TO THE INTERNET

    Narrator Lisa Flanagan has a wonderful vocal personality--lithe with a broad palette of pitch patterns and a range of believable emotional tones. Her friendly voice works well with this lighthearted overview of how dramatically the Internet has changed the world in the past 30 years. Though being digitally connected has improved life in many ways, the author says we've lost many of the interpersonal experiences that used to sustain us. We have less privacy, don't need all those reference books, and have largely forgotten how to have vocal conversations with other people. The audiobook is entertaining nostalgia for anyone who feels incompetent navigating the World Wide Web, and a soothing reminder that those of us who miss the simplicity of the pre-Internet era are not alone.

    Pub Date: Oct. 26, 2021

    Duration: 5 hrs, 30 mins

    DD ISBN: 9780593418055

    Publisher: Random House Audio

    Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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      150 GLIMPSES OF THE BEATLES

      Craig Brown tickled our ear with 99 GLIMPSES OF PRINCESS MARGARET, a brisk, irreverent assembly of tiny chapters that ran a satisfactory 12+ hours. For the Beatles, he adds 51 more glimpses and another eight hours, with a proportionally diluted effect. Brown himself, Kate Robbins, and Mark McGann share the narration, which is interesting, insightful, well performed, and packed with some new and a lot of old information. All of it is shaped by Brown's propensity for "easing sense into nonsense." The self-mocking Beatles are harder to deflate than a pretentious princess, but Brown's accounts of touring Beatles sites in Liverpool and his histories of Beatles contemporaries swept up--and aside--by their spectacular rise will amaze and beguile listeners.

      Pub Date: Oct. 13, 2020

      Duration: 20 hrs, 30 mins

      DD ISBN: 9781250770127

      Publisher: Macmillan Audio

      Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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