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All Hallow's Listen Part 2: Dave reviews Shadow Show: All-New Stories in Celebration of Ray Bradbury
Posted on 2012-10-19 at 14:00 by Dave
Shadow Show: All-New Stories in Celebration of Ray Bradbury edited by Sam Weller and Mort Castle Stories by: 26 writers including Neil Gaiman, Joe Hill, Audrey Niffenegger, Margaret Atwood, Alice Hoffman, Robert McCammon, and more Narrated by: George Takei, Edward Hermann, Kate Mulgrew, F. Murray Abraham, Neil Gaiman, Peter Appel, and James Urbaniak for Harper Audio Length: 14 hours, 11 minutes
Review by Dave Thompson
For me, Ray Bradbury’s name is more synonymous with October and Halloween than any other author I can think of (Neil Gaiman comes in second, a bit further down the line), so if this All Hallow's Listen series seems a little heavy on Ray, that's why.
With that in mind, it seemed natural to include the tribute anthology Shadow Show for All Hallows Listen. Anthologies are hard to write reviews about, particularly if the stories are good, because you want to talk about all the ones you loved, and this collection is crammed full of good stuff.
Read more...Posted in All Hallow's Listen, regular, reviews | Tagged all hallows listen, dave thompson, george takei, joe hill, kate mulgrew, neil gaiman, ray bradbury, reviews, shadow show
Received: Nine titles from Blackstone Audio
Posted on 2012-10-18 at 14:58 by Sam
First, though chronologically last, the physical mp3-cd shipment, which includes Crossing Overby Anna Kendall (2010, The Soulvine Moor Chronicles, Book One), The Sword-Edged Blonde by Alex Bledsoe (read by Stefan Rudnicki, 2009, The Eddie LaCrosse Mysteries, Book 1), None So Blind by Joe Haldeman, Some Kind of Fairy Tale by Graham Joyce (read by John Lee), and The Fullness of Time by Kate Wilhelm:
Second, though chronologically first, four digital review copies:
- V Wars Edited by Jonathan Maberry, Read by various readers (already listened, review soon)
- Between Two Fires By Christopher Buehlman Read by Steve West (already listened, review soon)
- Building Harlequin’s Moon By Larry Niven and Brenda Cooper Read by Tom Weiner
- Jepp, Who Defied the Stars By Katherine Marsh Read by Paul Michael Garcia
Posted in received
Release Week: The Twelve, Bowl of Heaven, Roadside Picnic, and George R.R. Martin
Posted on 2012-10-17 at 20:05 by Sam
Vampires and aliens are featured in two new highly-anticipated books in this mid-October release week, and aliens and vampires are also featured in new audiobooks of highly-regarded books published in past years.
The Twelve by Justin Cronin, read by Scott Brick for Random House Audio continues the story from Cronin's post-apocalyptic vampire novel The Passage which introduced a set of death row inmates used as experimental subjects for a virus discovered by an unfortunate South American expedition and the devastation and post-apocalyptic world which followed -- as well as the story of a group of humans fighting the vampires a hundred years in the future. In The Twelve we again get both "present day" storylines as well as the continuing story of Amy and other survivors fighting to save humanity. The Guilded Earlobe loved the audiobook and I'm hoping to yet find time for it later this year, helped by the fact that The Twelve is about ten and a half hours shorter -- though at 26.5 hours it's still a lengthy listen.
The alien artifact this release week is Bowl of Heaven By Larry Niven and Gregory Benford, Narrated by Zach Villa for Audible Frontiers -- Length: 12 hrs and 59 mins -- "In this first collaboration by science fiction masters Larry Niven (Ringworld) and Gregory Benford (Timescape), the limits of wonder are redrawn once again as a human expedition to another star system is jeopardized by an encounter with an astonishingly immense artifact in interstellar space: a bowl-shaped structure half-englobing a star, with a habitable area equivalent to many millions of Earths...and it’s on a direct path heading for the same system as the human ship."
Speaking of alien artifacts and human curiosity: Roadside Picnic by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky, read by Robert Forster for Random House Audio -- Length: 7 hrs and 17 mins -- A 1977 Soviet sf classic re-released earlier this year in a new US edition by Chicago Review Press, with a new translation by Orlena Bormashenko, a foreward by Ursula K. Le Guin, and an afterword by Boris Strugatsky: "Red Schuhart is a stalker, one of those young rebels who are compelled, in spite of extreme danger, to venture illegally into the Zone to collect the mysterious artifacts that the alien visitors left scattered around. His life is dominated by the place and the thriving black market in the alien products. But when he and his friend Kirill go into the Zone together to pick up a “full empty,” something goes wrong. And the news he gets from his girlfriend upon his return makes it inevitable that he’ll keep going back to the Zone, again and again, until he finds the answer to all his problems."
Meanwhile, Harper Audio has produced George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series, and Tuesday brought three of the author's backlist to audio, led for me by Fevre Dream, read by Ron Donachie, Martin’s 1982 vampire novel set on the Mississippi River in 1857. Also coming to audio are Windhaven (read by Harriet Walter) and Dying of the Light (read by Iain Glen).
ALSO OUT TUESDAY:
Read more...Posted in regular, Release Week | Tagged bowl of heaven, george rr martin, gregory benford, justin cronin, larry niven, mike mignola, release week, roadside picnic, scott brick, the twelve
Received: 3 titles from Harper Audio
Posted on 2012-10-15 at 17:49 by Sam
Received: More review copies from our fall requests are coming in, this batch includes three titles from Harper Audio:
- The Long Earth by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter
- Some Remarks by Neal Stephenson
- Dodger by Terry Pratchett
Posted in received, regular | Tagged dodger, harper-audio, neal stephenson, received, some remarks, terry pratchett, the long earth
What's in a name? Welcome to The AudioBookaneers!
Posted on 2012-10-14 at 00:56 by Sam
When I started The Audible SF/F Blog in June 2011, I was hoping that the double meaning of “audible”, that is both the well-known audiobook company and the state of being, er, audible, which is so very characteristic of audiobooks, wouldn’t create TOO much confusion. While the first words of the site description were “completely unaffiliated”, when people looked only at the short name, whether on Twitter @AudibleSFF or Facebook, or wherever, it’s pretty obvious that it wasn’t a good idea.
So: a new name! I’d been toying around with a few possibilities for the better part of a year, but it’s been actually fairly hard to find something that is available on both Facebook and Twitter, and also isn’t someone’s well-established pseudonym out there. And which both I and Dave (Thompson) both like.
But late last week, Dave sent me: “The AudioBookaneers”. Yes. That’s it. That’s the name we’ve been waiting on: Dave and I are now The AudioBookaneers, sailing the seven seas of audiobooks in search of treasure and monsters.
Along with the name change (Twitter and Facebook, done) it was also a good time to make one more move, to a blog set up for multiple contributors. So this new site (that you are reading, right now) is on Wordpress, which also hosts Bull Spec, and so I’ll only have to remember how to use one blogging platform, at least for a little while.
I hope you’ll keep following along on our continuing audiobook adventures, and: stay tuned pretty soon for info on something we’re calling “The Arrrrrrrrrrrdies”, our version of year-end audiobook awards for our listening year. (Some of those “rrr”s may be redacted. Or not…)
-Sam and Dave, The AudioBookaneers
PS: Obviously we still have some moving to do — and some new art in mind! So pardon the wreckage for a while.
Posted in regular | Tagged meta
Received: 5 titles from Brilliance Audio
Posted on 2012-10-14 at 00:02 by Sam

Posted in photo | Tagged brilliance-audio, received
All Hallow's Listen Part 1: Dave Thompson reviews The Halloween Tree by Rad Bradbury
Posted on 2012-10-12 at 19:55 by Sam
[Editor’s note: “All Hallow’s Listen” will be a 3-part series this October, featuring Dave Thompson’s reviews on Halloween-suitable audiobooks. Stay tuned each Friday!]

The Halloween Tree By Ray Bradbury Narrated by Bronson Pinchot for Blackstone Audio Length: 3 hrs and 11 mins Release Date: 07-25-11
Review by Dave Thompson: All Hallow’s Listen #1: An October Essential
If you’re looking for a fun story to listen to this Halloween, look no further. Bradbury’s The Halloween Tree is about as essential to October as Linus and the Great Pumpkin. After listening to it, I’m kind of surprised there isn’t a stop motion film from Henry Selick in the works yet.
Posted in All Hallow's Listen, regular, reviews | Tagged all hallows listen, all hallows read, dave thompson, ray bradbury, reviews, the halloween tree
First thoughts on Downpour: DRM-free and beta-testing (updated)
Posted on 2012-10-11 at 10:32 by Sam
Downpour is a new multi-publisher DRM-free digital audiobook (and physical audiobook) website and iOS app launched by Blackstone Audio, with titles from Recorded Books, Hachette Audio, and more. The site is a bit slow at times (note: it is still in Beta) but it is certainly usable, though a link here and there is wonky (when browsing Science Fiction titles, which are by default and always by default sorted by title, try clicking to sort by release date and you’ll instead get the page for Captain’s Blood by William Shatner). Overall it is set up quite a lot like Audible.com, with a-la-carte purchases of digital downloads and monthly “credit” based plans, and the addition of physical audiobook listings.
Read more... Posted in regular | Tagged downpour, miscellaneous
Release Week: Tad Williams, Steven Erikson, Iain M. Banks, and The Lord of the Rings
Posted on 2012-10-10 at 15:07 by Sam
What the second release week in October lacks in the staggering numbers department, it makes up for with three absolutely stellar titles: urban fantasy from Tad Williams, the latest Iain M. Banks “Culture” novel, and the long-awaited first audio installment of Steven Erikson’s Malazan Book of the Fallen epic fantasy series. And! The long-awaited digital audio release of the Rob Inglis narrations of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings.
I’ve bemoaned the US audiobook absence of The Dirty Streets of Heaven: Bobby Dollar, Book 1 By Tad Williams for quite a few release weeks now, but this week brings a Penguin Audio production of George Newbern’s narration: “You’ve never met an angel like Bobby Dollar. … Brace yourself - the afterlife is weirder than you ever believed.”
Read more... Posted in regular, Release Week | Tagged gardens of the moon, iain m banks, j.r.r. tolkien, release week, steven erikson, tad williams, the dirty streets of heaven, the hydrogen sonata, the lord of the rings
Cory Doctorow's Pirate Cinema, DRM-free and direct from the author
Posted on 2012-10-08 at 17:45 by Sam
Via author Cory Doctorow’s blog, he is selling direct, EULA- and DRM-free downloads of his latest audiobook, Pirate Cinema (Listening Library, read by Bruce Mann), from his own website. It’s also available DRM-free from Simply Audiobooks, eMusic, BooksOnBoard, and Barnes & Noble (probably among others), but this is the first I can remember seeing a publisher-published audiobook being sold directly in this manner. (I have purchased some of his previous audiobooks DRM-free from some of the above stores, and anyone who follow’s Doctorow’s writings knows that being DRM-free is nothing new. But this is an interesting new development.)
Posted in regular | Tagged cory doctorow, drm, listening library, pirate cinema
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