Fun Friday: Take a Tour of Middle Earth
Trailer Thursday: Austenland
Can’t wait for this!
Book-Talk Monday: Let’s Talk Audiobooks
Image from Slate.com
I started listening to books-on-tape more than seventeen years ago—the first time was when I drove from Northern Virginia, where I was living at the time, to Nashville for a job interview and to apartment hunt. The public library system in NoVA had, even then, a HUGE selection of books-on-tape because so many people up there have quite long commutes (at one point, I was commuting almost an hour and a half to work at a job in downtown DC) and, either sitting in traffic in their cars or on the Metro, listening to a book-on-tape helped make that commute a little more tolerable. I don’t necessarily remember in what order I checked them out, but the first three books I listened to were Dances with Wolves by Michael Blake (who then turned it into the screenplay for the Kevin Costner movie), John Grisham’s The Firm, and an abridged version of Catherine Marshall’s Christy, read by Kellie Martin (the show had just gone off the air). Those books made the ten hour drive between Chantilly, Virginia, and Nashville—which I was making almost every weekend the first month, as my relocation was somewhat piecemeal—go by so much faster! (Since then, I’ve downloaded the unabridged version of Christy.)
My next big audiobook purchases were all six of Jane Austen’s novels, Little Women, and a bunch of novels in the Star Wars expanded universe. When audiobooks started coming out on CD, I was sold! The only problem was changing them in and out safely in the car.
In 2005, I downloaded my first book from Audible—it was Janet Evanovich’s One for the Money (an assigned genre read for grad school), and I had to burn it to CD because I didn’t have an MP3 player. And that, as we say, was that. I was hooked. I started researching MP3 players, because it had to be better to do that than to keep burning CDs. So I bought one. But even still, there was one series I had to buy on CD—and that’s the Harry Potter series. I have the entire unabridged audiobook of each of the seven books. But I didn’t listen to them as CDs. I ripped them to the computer and made my own digital audiobooks of them.
And it was the narrator of the Harry Potter books, Jim Dale, who turned me into an extremely picky consumer of audiobooks. I’m a narrator snob! I want readers who can make each character sound different, who gives enough tonal difference between male and female characters, it’s easy to tell them apart. And who can do accents, drama, and humor.
Of course, no one will ever equal Jim Dale—nor should anyone ever try!—but I do have a few other favorites. Charlotte Parry, who narrated Sandra Byrd’s To Die For and also voiced Catherine Howard in Philippa Gregory’s The Boleyn Inheritance is one of my favorites. Ashford McNabb, who was (up until book 5) reading the Maiden Lane series by Elizabeth Hoyt, is another favorite.
The narrator can make or break an audiobook. The reader they got for the fifth Elizabeth Hoyt/Maiden Lane book was so terrible that I almost couldn’t finish the book—and this is a series I’m hooked on! Then there’s the sound editing. I listened to another book this year in which the reader’s “mouth noises” and swallowing were so prominent in the recording that I could listen only for short periods before I was so grossed out that I had to turn it off.
The reader for Under the Dome is good—though he has a tendency to make the characters who are supposed to have a “posh” Maine accent sound they’re from rural Georgia, and a French character sounds like a bad parody of a deep-bayou Cajun accent. But, that aside, especially considering how many characters he’s having to voice, he’s doing a great job.
There are certain narrators I will not listen to, as well—though those are mostly based on personal preference on whether or not I enjoy the sound of the narrator’s voice or how he/she pronounces words or uses (or doesn’t use) inflection/tone/accent. I was highly disappointed after downloading the unabridged versions of all of Dee Henderson’s O’Malley series to discover the narrator was an older man who sounds like he’s smoked heavily all of his life. This was especially bad when he was trying to voice the female characters and the romantic scenes.
The nice thing about Audible—and what I make use of now when it’s a narrator I’m unfamiliar with—is the sample that you can listen to before committing to buying the book. And other listeners are pretty good, if they do leave a review, about reviewing both the narrator and the story, since each is so integral to the experience.
Do you listen to audiobooks?
Do you have a favorite reader?
Are there certain types of books you prefer to listen to?
When do you listen to audiobooks?
How do you listen to audiobooks (an iPod/MP3, your phone, tape/CD, etc.)?
What’s been your overall experience with audiobooks?
Fun Friday: What’s your Batman Name?

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We’ve had so much fun with these the past several weeks, I thought it was time for another one.
This one, like the others, was also shamelessly borrowed from BuzzFeed.
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I’m BATMAN!
Happy Friday! 😀
Another Eye-Candy New Obsession
A couple of weeks ago, I made a public announcement bequeathing former eye-candy obsession (and template for Andrew in Follow the Heart) Henry Cavill to my friend Liz. In the comments on that post, I mentioned that I had another new obsession in the pipeline, but that I would keep him under wraps a little longer.
As a reminder, here are my current obsessions:
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And now it’s time to round out my male “harem” with a fourth. Drumroll please . . .
Aside from the fact that he’s blond—which is not usually my “type”—he actually fits in really well with the other three. He’s just over 6’1″ (as are all three of the others!). He’s foreign (Danish). He looks good cleaned up and scruffy. And if anyone watches Game of Thrones, you know there’s a lot not to like about his character, Jamie Lannister. But, in looking at the other three men above, you’ll also realize that I don’t have a problem with that, as the three of them have all played their share of bad/evil characters as well.
And, then there’s the fact that he’s a dead ringer for Prince Charming.
Okay, yes, that’s Prince Charming from Shrek 2.
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What do you think? Is he obsession worthy? Meaning, is he worthy of consideration for becoming the template for a future hero in one of my stories?
What Are You Reading? (July 2013)
Open Book by Dave Dugdale
It’s the first Monday of the month. I hope your lists are ready! (And if you’ve reviewed the books you’ve read somewhere, please include links!)
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- What book(s) did you finish reading (or listening to) since last month’s update?
- What are you currently reading and/or listening to?
- What’s the next book on your To Be Read stack/list?
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Since last month’s update, I finished reading:
- I DNF’ed The White Queen by Philippa Gregory and Her Warrior King by Michelle Willingahm. You can click through on the titles to read my reasons why I did not finish them.
- I re-“read” (listened to) Seduction and Scandal by Charlotte Featherstone, which was one of the better books I “read” (listened to) last year. I enjoyed it almost as much the second time—and I think I needed something familiar at the moment, since I haven’t enjoyed anything new I’ve picked up recently. (click through for original review and re-read thoughts).
I had my first experience with an original written-word (well, spoken-word in this case) Sherlock Holmes story with the audio version of “The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle”—a short story that Audible gave away free at Christmas. It was read by Alan Cumming and was only about an hour long, so it made a nice distraction while getting ready for work one morning.- I decided to give historical romance another try and checked Lord Greville’s Captive by Nicola Cornick out from the library. I wanted to like it more than I did, but at least I was able to finish it. You can click through to read my thoughts on that one.
I am currently reading:
- Under The Dome by Stephen King, audiobook read by Raul Esparza. I got about 12 hours into this 35 hour book before watching the first episode of the TV show (loosely) based on it.
I’ve decided to finish the book before watching the show. There are just too many changes for me to try to keep the characters and occurrences in the book straight from what’s being done differently on the show. - Angelfall (Penryn & the End of Days #1) by Susan Ee. I decided since historical romance wasn’t cutting it for me at the moment, I’d try dystopian, paranormal YA instead. So far, so good.
Next on my TBR list:
- The Hero’s Lot (The Staff and the Sword #2) by Patrick W. Carr. I’ve preordered this, so it should appear on my Kindle today!
Fun Friday–Five (Fun) Questions

Put your thinking caps on and get creative. The funnier your answer(s), the better!
1. Who is the celebrity you would most hate to sit next to on a long flight?
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2. Name something that costs more money if you have a daughter instead of a son.
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3. Name a musical instrument that is too big to carry on an airplane.
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4. Name a bad sport for someone who is afraid of the water.
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5. Name someplace where you might find lint.
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Trailer Thursday: Sleepy Hollow
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So, what do you think? Will you give it a whirl this fall?








