Top 5 Audio Books… according to Narrator Tavia Gilbert

Audio month

 

I began narrating in the fall of 2007, so I’ve been a full-time narrator for almost seven years and have recorded close to 300 books. I have so many beloved projects, including Let Me Stand Alone — the journals of Rachel Corrie, many books of non-fiction by the brilliant Annie Dillard, several wonderful Carlotta Carlyle mysteries, Kate Christensen’s memoir, thrillers by Allison Leotta, science fiction by John Scalzi, young adult fiction by Katherine Paterson, children’s stories like The Wizard of Oz and the Velveteen Rabbit...and more. If you visit TaviaGilbert.com/full-audiography, you’ll see my complete audiobook listing, with my personal favorites highlighted in blue. I’m fortunate to have been given great books to voice throughout my career the years, and have some more fantastic book projects on the horizon.
Tavia Gilbert
Five amazing audiobooks? It’s very hard to choose just five, but here’s a list of a few favorite audiobooks!
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The Fault In Our Stars, by John Green, narrated by Kate Rudd (young adult)
Kate inhabits this story, which has been such a smash hit in the last couple of years. I couldn’t stop listening to this book, and at the same time I couldn’t bear for it to end. I’ve never listened to an audiobook twice, but this might be the first multiple-listen experience. Kate was exceptional in her performance, fully bringing the characters to life, capturing every bit of wry humor, creating such a nuanced reading that I was absolutely captivated.
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Rise & Shine, by Anna Quindlen, narrated by Carol Monda (contemporary fiction)
I love listening to Carol Monda’s narration, and this is a great performance of a compelling story. I’ve told Carol how I feel when she begins a story — I totally and completely trust her. I relax in her masterful presence, because I know that she will not make a wrong turn anywhere along the path. Her pacing is perfect, her characterizations spot on, her dialogue true to life, her heart completely open and her work completely in the moment. I’m a better narrator because I’ve listened to her work.
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The Sunday Philosophy Club Series, by Alexander McCall Smith, narrated by Davina Porter (literary fiction/philosophy)
I adore Davina Porter’s narration of Isabel Dalhousie’s stories. Alexander McCall Smith is a captivating, charming, contemplative writer, and this series is just fantastic. Davina creates soulful, heart-felt, fiercely intelligent voice performances — she’s the perfect medium for the compassionate and thoughtful characters Smith writes. This team of writer and voice actor is unparalleled, and I luxuriate in the listening experience.
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Call the Midwife, by Jennifer Worth, narrated by Nicola Barber (memoir)
I fell in love with the British television series, Call the Midwife, and later equally delighted in Nicola Barber’s narration of the memoir by Jennifer Worth. Nicola’s characterizations and accents are spot on, and I was riveted by the story. Call the Midwife fans will be pleased to hear story lines that they recognize from the TV show, but those unfamiliar with the series will quickly become devotees of the young British midwives and Catholic sisters whose lives make this a wonderful listen.
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The Millennium Trilogy, by Stieg Larsson, narrated by Simon Vance (thriller)
You cannot go wrong with a performance by Simon Vance, and the dark, terrifying, thrilling Swedish series is excellent. Simon is a master story-teller, and he was perfectly cast for this series. His characterizations are never over the top but always differentiated, the suspense horrifying with his subtlety and nuance, the timing and delivery impeccable. These books are not for the faint of heart, but they’re even better with Simon’s performance.
And a bonus question….
And this isn’t a funny narration story, but a sweet one:
Years ago, years after I graduated from Seattle’s Cornish College of the Arts, one of my most beloved college voice and speech teachers, Stephanie Kallos, left full-time acting and teaching to concentrate on her writing. 
Her first novel, Broken For You, was beautifully narrated by Anna Fields, one of the best narrators in the history of audiobooks. 
Anna died tragically when she was trapped in her Seattle recording studio during a flood; the loss to the audiobook community was enormous. 
When Stevie’s second novel, Sing Them Home, was published, I was very new to the narration art-form, but because it was the novel of a dear friend, I wanted the opportunity to do the project, and I campaigned for it. 
Being told that the novel was mine to voice came with a feeling of great responsibility, because I so wanted to make Stevie proud, I wanted to reach the bar that Anna Fields had set, and the story was long and complex and crazy challenging — multiple dialects, Welsh language, and singing, as well as several distinct main characters and about 100 characters in total, including a very young child, and a 100-year-old man — who sang in Welsh! 
It was a daunting project then, and it would be a daunting project now, six years and hundreds of books later. 
But I had a fantastic director, and we worked very slowly and carefully on the performance, and it won my first Earphones Award. 
Most importantly, Stevie loved the work, and I felt that I had, in fact, honored Anna Fields by taking everything I’d learned from listening to countless books she’d narrated, and doing the very best work I was capable of. 
Stevie is publishing her third novel next year, and we are both so hopeful that I will be invited to narrate the project. Her writing is extraordinary, and it’s so special voicing a story that someone I love carefully crafted, so I’d be thrilled to work with her again. Our fingers are crossed!
Tavia

Please watch this site for June audio book related posts.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month, Sheila DeChantal, Book Journey

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

If I Can’t Have You by Gregg Olsen and Rebecca Morris

If I Cant Have You, Gregg Olsen, Susan Powell, Book Journey, Sheila DeChantal, Rebecca Morris

Susan Powell, A pretty blond young mother in Utah disappeared in December of 2009.  Friends and family were baffled with the sudden and complete disappearance of Susan who would never have abandoned her two sons.

The only one who did not seem distressed with her disappearance, was her husband, Josh Powell.

As details unfold those who have not followed this event will be shocked at the level of dysfunction involved within a family that carried beyond the first generation.

Over the next three years, the police and investigators would uncover disturbing evidence involving a loveless marriage, and a father-in-laws obsession with his beautiful daughter in law.  Most disturbing of all was Josh’s decision that when his boys were no longer allowed to stay with him, then no one would be allowed to have his sons.

 

 

If I Can’t Have You is a powerful and disturbing true retelling of the disappearance of Susan Powell and the eventual murder of her two young sons.  It is always hard to put into words what I think of a true crime read.  Bizarre, engaging, the human psyche occasionally blows my mind.

True Crime authors Gregg Olsen and Rebecca Morris did an amazing recollection of the details of this sad senseless occurrence of not that many years ago.  I listened to this on audio and narrator Kevin Pierce handles this difficult subject matter with a professional and appropriate tone.

Readers/listeners of true crime will find If I Can’t Have You to be an accurate retelling of a heartbreaking event of modern time.

 

 

Please watch this site for June audio book related posts.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month, Sheila DeChantal, Book Journey

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

The Best Audio Books According to the Listeners

Audio month

It is no secret that I LOVE ♥ audio.  I know many of you who comment here fall into one of the following categories:

 

  1. You also LOVE audiobooks (listen whenever and WHEREVER you can)
  2. You have dabbled a bit with audio and occasionally listen (long car rides, etc…)
  3. New to audio… curious about it but no idea where to start, how to choose it,or where to choose…
  4. Been there…tried that.. not for me, but since you are reading this post you will skim what is said here. 😉

 

Whatever category you fall into, please allow me this indulgence of a little “audio gush”.  As I mentioned earlier this month, I am a fairly new audiobook listen around the 3-4 year mark.  In that time I have found audio that I have just loved, not wanting it to end, and those are the audio books I want to share with you today – and I want you (audio book listeners) to share with me and the readers here as well so we can build a fun “fortress of audio LOVE” here.

 

Ready?

Let’s do this!

 

 

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Ready Player One is one of my all time favorite audio.  Wil Wheaton does an amazing job of narration.  Seriously, the guy could come over and read me the back of the cereal box and I would be happy 🙂  This guy narrates so well that I have looked up books narrated by him just to get more.  (True story!)

 

 

 

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Yes -you have a good chance having read these books…or at least you much have seen the movies.  Now – I challenge you, try these books on audio for an AMAZING experience!  There are two narrators in the audio books of Harry Potter, Jim Dale and Steven Fry are fantastic narrators and I could not recommend one version over the other.  Do it.  Listen to these books!

 

 

 

 

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R C Brays narration of The Martian is fantastic.  I was delightfully surprised when protagonist Mark Watney comes off as a smart witty astronaut in this great novel.

 

 

 

 

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Authors narrating their own books does not always work out ell but Rob Lowe is an exception.  He has a wonderfully paced voice of a natural storyteller.  I enjoyed both of his memoirs telling of his childhood, his movie career, and his life as an 80’s child star.

 

 

 

 

 

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Delightful book and just as much on audio as well. Read by several narrators – Susan Lyons (Reader), Anna Bentink (Reader), Steven Crossley (Reader), Alex Tregear (Reader), Andrew Wincott (Reader), Owen Lindsay (Reader) , this book will take you on an amazing journey.

 

 

 

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Liane Moriarty’s books are fun and in audio – a blast!  Read by narrator Caroline Lee – this is another great listen.

 

 

 

 

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Suspense lovers treat yourself to a Dan Drown audio book.  Inferno is a wonderful audiobook with narrator Paul Michael.

 

I could go on and on but I really want you to share with me the top audio books you LOVED.  Not only does this add to my audio wish list (picture a candy store but instead it is filled with beautiful shiny colorful mouth watering audio books!), I want to create a list of GREAT audio for all levels of audio lover-listeners- novices – newbies – and dabblists.

According to Sheila…. A Dabblist is one who partakes in the act of dabbling…  “Jimmy was quite the dabblist when it came choosing just the right steaks to grill.”

 

Please share in the comments below the great audiobooks that  you would recommend.  This post is part of the June giveaway:

 

 

Please watch this site (Book Journey) for June audio book related posts.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

 

The Beginning Of Narration as told by Narrator Allyson Johnson

Audio month

I’m Allyson Johnson, and I took a rather circuitous path to becoming an audiobook narrator.  First let me just say that I have always, always loved books!  One of my fondest childhood memories is going to the Chicago Public Library with my mother, choosing and checking out books, then taking them home, where I would proceed to read them aloud to my stuffed animals.  (As an only child, this was as close as I could get to having someone listen.)  So I guess, in a way, I was a narrator from the beginning.

 

allyson johnson, narator, Sheila DeChantal, book journey

It wasn’t until 7 ½ years ago, however, that I actually incorporated audiobook narration into my career.  After moving to New York City with a Psychology degree, I did social work for a number of years, before making a career shift into tv production.  It was there that I began doing voice-over work and found a calling, of sorts.  After I left television, I started working with a coach, to learn the craft of voice acting, mic technique, etc.  This led to work in commercial, promo, and industrial voice-over, which I’ve continued to do for almost two decades.  But I longed for opportunities that would expand my skill set…that would allow me to depict characters who didn’t necessarily sound like me.

 

My first books were Children / YA titles, from early readers like “Corduroy”, to a lovely series about race relations in Depression-era Mississippi, by Mildred D. Taylor.  Her “Let the Circle Be Unbroken” remains one of my favorites.  I also voice the ongoing Honor Harrington space opera series (a genre that is such fun to record), by David Weber.  I recently had the privilege of narrating “Harmony”, a wonderful sci-fi classic by esteemed scenic designer, Marjorie B. Kellogg.  And I was honored to be chosen by author Ntozake Shange to read her poetic memoir, “Lost in Language & Sound”.

Allyson Johnson, narrator, Sheila DeChantal, Book Journey
Allyson… the early years, the die was cast…

 

When I’m assigned a book, the first thing I do is get out notecards, a pen,and a pencil (some initial choices might need to be erased later).  Even in this digital age, I prefer having hard copies of my notes  to refer back to.  Those cards have come in handy on more than one occasion.  You should see the stack I’ve compiled for the Honor series!  Next I open a couple of bookmarked dictionaries on my computer.  Sometimes I need foreign language dictionaries, in addition to the English ones, depending on where a book is set.  You’d be surprised how many words you think you know until you actually look them up!  Rule of thumb – if there’s even a chance that you might get it wrong, check the dictionary.

 

Once I’m all set up, I settle in to read the book.  The whole book, from start to finish.  It’s important (especially with fiction) to know in advance where the story is going and how the characters develop / interact with one another.  I also find it essential to know which characters, besides my protagonist, are going to talk a lot.  Because I don’t want to give them voices that I can’t maintain for several hours.  And there are many times when an author does not indicate where a character is from, therefore what accent s/he should have, until quite a ways into the story.

Allyson Johnson, Book Journey, Sheila DeChantal
A shot from this year’s Audie Awards (L – R: narrator Eva Kaminsky, me, Audible Producer Kat Lambrix, narrator Lauren Fortgang)

My performing background is more musical than anything else.  So I’ve always approached narration from that viewpoint.  As I prep, I’m hearing the characters speak in my head and taking notes on any vocal traits the author gives me.  There is an inherent rhythm to sentence structure, so I’m also marking places where I know I’ll need to breathe, and underlining words that need emphasis.  Unlike rehearsing a play or a song, I won’t have the opportunity to go over and over a line (unless I mess it up in the booth…which happens all the time) so I find these little cues save me time.  If I stay “in my head” while prepping, I can stay “out of my head” while recording.

 

 If I stay “in my head” while prepping, I can stay “out of my head” while recording.

 

As I read, I’m marking my script so that I can tell who’s talking before I say the sentence.  For me, this generally means writing the first letter or two of their name in the left margin.  Some narrators highlight different characters in different colors, but my mind is a little more linear and a little less visual.  Occasionally, I mentally yell at authors who have a predilection for creating multiple names that start with the same letter, but overall this system works for me.  I like to keep two sets of notes for each book — one with character names, brief descriptions, and vocal choices, another with words and phrases that I need to look up, or ask the author about, later.

 

Nowadays, you can find many resources online, some with audio pronunciations (a godsend).  For instance, there are sites like http://www.dialectsarchive.com/ where you can hear people speak English in a variety of native accents.  http://www.forvo.com/ is useful for hearing foreign words spoken by natives.  In addition, you can find all sorts of things on YouTube, like the way a “real” person says his or her own name, or how someone from a specific place says the name of a town.  And I’m a huge fan of calling a local Chamber of Commerce or Embassy.  The folks who work in these places are always friendly and eager to help you get their regionalism right.

 

Once all of the preliminary prep is done, I go back over my notes and make choices about how I’m going to do each voice.  Frequently, I can simply write these down in shorthand.  I don’t rehearse them, per se.  But for books with lots of characters, I get out my digital recorder and read a few sentences in that person’s voice, so that I can refer to them in the session.  With a series, this consistency is particularly important because sometimes you go months or even years between books.  However, a listener might be listening to them back-to-back.  I prefer to record with an engineer, whenever possible, to have another person’s ears helping me maintain my energy, my accents, and catching those mispronounced words that I was oh-so-sure I knew!

 

The hardest part of narration?  Hmmm….  I guess that would be when there are lots of characters who are the same-sex, same basic age, from the same place, all speaking to one another in a scene.  You have to come up with creative ways of distinguishing them, without taking the listener out of the story.

Allyson JOhnson home studio, Book JOurney, Sheila DeChantal
Allyson’s home studio

My favorite part of narrating happens in the booth itself.  You know…the part most people assume narration is but that, like most worthwhile endeavors, can only happen after much work has been done.  At this point, I get to sit down and do what I love to do best…tell a story.  I can stop thinking about the book intellectually and just flow with the prose, living in the characters’ worlds for those blessed hours when I get to leave my own world behind.  It is this experience of breathing life into the writer’s words that is the most fulfilling.

 

I asked Allyson a bonus question, “if she were to write a memoir, who would she want to narrate her story?”   To be honest, I’m not sure who I would want to narrate my own memoir, besides…er…the obvious 🙂  I can’t really give you a specific name.  But I’d want it to be one of my fellow journeymen…an audiobook narrator who’s had lots of experience recording books, who shares my reverence for the craft and art of making words sing.

To see more information on Allyson, please check out these links:

www.allysonsvoice.com

www.facebook.com/allysonsvoice       

www.twitter.com/allysonsvoice

 

 

Please watch this site (Book Journey) for June audio book related posts.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

A Day In The Life Of A Narrator – w/ Narrator Therese Plummer

Audio month

My name is Therese Plummer and I started narrating Audiobooks about 9 years ago. I have narrated over two hundred books. Some of my favorites have been The Virgin River and Thunder Point series by Robyn Carr, Tender is The Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Want Not by Jonathan Miles, Faith by Jennifer Haigh, The Family Fang by Kevin Wilson to name a few. I feel so lucky to have narrated so many amazing stories!

 

Therese Plummer, narrator, Sheila DeChantal, Book Journey

So a typical narration day for me starts with a really good nights sleep and plenty of it, 8-9 hours ideally. I will wake up and in the shower I will use a netti pot which clears out the sinus passages and do my vocal warm ups which include a variety of facial exercises, tongue-twisters and diaphragmatic breathing. I drink a liter of water. I will eat a light breakfast of a banana or oatmeal and have an almond milk cappuccino. Once I am at my studio, if it is going to be a six-hour day, I will ask my engineer if he/she will arrange the microphone so I can stand. I find my breath support is better on longer days if I stand. I will usually work an hour or hour and a half before taking a break. After two or three hours we will break for lunch and go back and work another few hours. A normal recording day is from 10am until 4pm. When I am done I usually don’t talk much for the rest of the night. If I have other prepping to do I will do that at home or just relax and get another good night’s sleep for the next days session.

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What I enjoy most about the narration process is bringing this entire story and cast of characters alive. It’s like a one woman show every day. It’s amazing when I have been able to narrate with other actors on a story. It really is such a creative process. All of the theatrical experience I have has to come through my voice in the sound booth and it is imperative that I am able to convey that emotion vocally since that is all my audience has to go on. I am in someone’s earbud for hours at a time and as such the volume and intensity of stage acting must be minimized but just as effective to transport them through the story. It is such a creative challenge learning how to do this from book to book. I learn from every book I have recorded.

 

The other thing I love about my job is the community of actors I get to work with every day. The Audiobook community from the actors, engineers, producers, bloggers and publishers are the nicest group of people I have ever met and worked with. It is a big family and I hope I get to tell stories with all of them for a long time.

 

Check out more on Therese at her website:  http://www.thereseplummer.com/

 

Please watch this site for June audio book related posts.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

 

Delicious by Ruth Reichl

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I simply ADORE books about food… memoirs, non fiction, fiction…. and I have read everything that Ruth Reichl has written.. Delicious being her first fiction story I was THRILLED to dive in!  Whatever this woman writes… turns into magic.  ~Sheila

Billie Breslin is excited when she lands a job at Delicious, the cream of the crop magazine of New York.  She is young and feels unqualified to be playing in the big league, but Billie has something that is rare, she has a refined palate that can identify even the toughest of ingredients within a dish. While Billie loves to be a part of the behind the scenes of the magazine, even with much prompting she has no desire to actually cook for reasons she chooses not to say.  Then suddenly, while it looks as though all of Billie’s dreams are coming true, the magazine is shut down, leaving long term employees stunned and Billie in shock as her dreams seem to tumble broken to the ground.

When Billie is asked to stay on as the sole employee of Delicious to continue to respond to letters to uphold the Delicious guarantee (if any recipe is not to your satisfaction you will be refunded the cost of your ingredients), she reluctantly agrees as she has no other immediate plans.  While exploring the abandoned Delicious library before it goes on the market, she discovers a series of letters hidden in a secret room off the buildings library.  These letters dating back to WWII, written by Lucy Swan, an intelligent 12 year old open up a part of Billie that she did not know existed, and may finally help her to release the secret she has held on to tightly for way too long.

As Ruth Reichl’s first fiction book I do admit I was a little cautious. When I first seen the book title I figured she had written another wonderful non fiction read centered around her amazing life of food tastings, restaurants, and more… a fiction story gave me pause, but also… curiosity.

Let me just tell you, no need to pause.  PLEASE readers of food memoirs, foodish themed books, and also those who enjoy a good fiction read centered around characters you want to go have dinner with – DO NOT PASS UP ON THIS BOOK.

I listened to this on audio and absolutely fell in love with Julie Whelan’s narration.  She brought the characters to life and I so want Sammy to be a real person because I think he and I could talk for hours and hours.  I enjoyed this book so much I do not want to give up these amazing people I met within the pages and would absolutely follow them down another path if another book ever just happened to continue on with them.  Just saying… 😉

Audiobook listeners – treat yourself to this DELICIOUS book… and those of you who do not do audio, I am confident that this book will read just as engagingly.

Fun note:  While in New York for the Book Expo I attended an Audio Book Tea and Ruth Reichl was speaking there (the draw for me).  She mentioned that several things in this book actually happened to her – the loss of a  magazine job due to the closing of its doors, and some of the amazing descriptions within the book.  I wish I could have chatted with her about this as I am SO CURIOUS as to how much is fiction….

Just today while looking for Ruth Reichl’s website I discovered a recent article by The New York Times regarding this book.  I have not read it yet as I try to avoid all reviews and articles on books I have plans to review, but as soon as I finish typing this out, I am off to read it.  I am sure it is a GLOWING review.

I have added this post to Beth Fish Reads Weekend Cooking.

Audio month

File Under 13 Suspicious Incidents by Lemony Snicket

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  • Listening Length: 3 hours and 1 minute
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Hachette Audio

 

 

If you are not a member of our secret organization, hello there. This is a blank audiobook which you shouldn’t listen to.  ~ as seen on the back of the audio jacket

Lemony Snicket is in the town of Stain’d-by-the-Sea but his stay is not a quiet one.  In thirteen separate incidents he is called upon to assist in cracking a mystery.  Kidnappings, vandalism, food theft, and even potential ghosts, Lemony, along with the help of the reader, solves each case.

13 Suspicious Incidents is divided into thirteen short stories read by different narrators.  Kudos to John Scieszka, Terry Gross, Sarah Vowell, Libba Bray, Ira Glass, Sophie Blackall, Jon Klassen, Chris Kluwe, Holly Black, Sook-Yin Lee, Rachel Maddow, Stephin Merritt, and Wesley Stace.

Each story is a mystery that Lemony files and then moves on to the next case.  At the end of the thirteen stories, each story is quickly revisited and explains the solution.  What a fun may for a middle grade student to try to solve these mysteries before they hear the answers!

I personally found the stories fun and enjoyed the different narrations.  I have to admit… some of the cases had me stumped and I had to wait to the end to figure it out. 🙂

This audio is right around 3 hours long.  This would be great for a car ride with kids.

The Summer Of Letting Go by Gae Polisner

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Summer has arrived and 15-year-old Francesca “Frankie” Schell has no big plans.  Four years ago while on the beach with her family, Francesca’s little brother Simon drowned while Francesca was supposed to be watching him.  Even now, Francesca’s mother is distant towards her and her father seems to be spending a little too much time at the single ladies house across the street.  Francesca’s best friend is always busy with her super cute boyfriend Bradley who Francesca wishes was her own.

With her home life a mess, Francesca goes to the local country club where she meets a darling 4-year-old boy named ironically Frankie and has a striking resemblance to Simon.  As more and more coincidences starts to come up, Francesca starts to wonder if there is such a thing as reincarnation or if this is some sort of cosmic alignment trying to help Francesca to move forward from the tragedy that has held her in place for so long.

 

 

 

The Summer Of Letting Go is an engaging summer read that brings you right into the world that Francesca lives in.  A powerful read of loss and moving on from the perspective of a teenage girl who not only has lived the pain of loss first hand, but also sees how if affects others around her.

I was surprised how engaged I became in this book.  Well written, I had at least two moments where I caught my breath.. Gae Polisner does a fine job of bringing you right to that teenage level of “emotion amplified” and I didn’t want the book to end.

If you do audio, I recommend listening to this one.  The narration of Tara Sands was excellent.  Tara handled the different characters flawlessly.

 

The Here And Now by Ann Brashares

The Here And Now, Book Journey, Ann Brashares

Premma James has lived in New York since she was twelve years old.   But Premma did not move from another state or another country to New York.

She moved from another time. The year 2090. The future.

In Premma’s time the world is in shambles due to a mosquito-born virus that killed millions.  For Premma, and those like her who have escaped to the past to live better lives, they are under strict rules:

1.  Never reveal where you are from

2.  Never interfere with history

3.  Never be intimate with someone outside their community

And that works just fine.  Until Premma meets Ethan Jarves.

 

 

YA with an environmental flavor!  ~Sheila

 

The Here And Now is A fairly quick paced YA read.  Premma makes for a wonderful environmentally conscious protagonist.  Her personal goals of trying to help prevent the future from happening as she knows it currently stands is admirable.

I enjoyed the read for the most part.  The way things fall together is a little convenient, however my enjoyment of world building books allowed that fact to lapse into the overall enjoyment of the book.

 

Fun Fact:  Ann Brashares is also the author of The Traveling Pants books, which was also a fun movie.  If you are familiar with that story you know what style of writer Ann is.  Her characters are relational and three-dimensional which makes for good reading!

Not Lost Forever by Carmina Salcido and Steve Jackson

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On April 14th, 1989, Ramon Salcido came home and murdered his wife, Angela, her two sisters, and his mother-in-law.  He took his three young daughters; Sophia (4), Carmina (3), and 22 month old Teresa and drove around for hours eventually taking them to a county dump and slashing their throats one at a time.

Miraculously, more than a day later, the three children’s bodies were discovered and 3-year-old Camina was still alive.

You would think that Carmina had enough trauma to last a life time, but her run of unhappiness continued from there.  Now with no family who could care for her, Carmina is adopted by a highly dysfunctional family that changes her name claiming that “Carmina” had died that day and has now been reborn as someone new.  The bizarre behavior does not end there.  Eventually she winds up at a girls camp for troubled girls which was both mentally and physically damaging. Meanwhile, Carmina’s father is still alive in prison… and he would like to see her…

 

 

Oof ta.  You may wonder why this book, now 5 years after being published, I decided to read it now.  Interestingly, I found this audio by narrator.  Xe Sands has an amazing narrative voice and while looking for good audio and coming up with nothing that was catching my attention I tried looking up books by narrators (yup… you can do that).  When I read the synopsis on this book, on a true crime that I had never heard of, I knew I wanted to know more.

My heart breaks for Carmina.  What a devastating life she has led.  This book,written by Carmina, tells the events that surrounded the tragedy in her life starting at a very young age.  With the assistance of friends, relatives, and co-workers to her parents, Carmina is able to piece together what seems to have happened that fateful day that her father killed her entire immediate family.  Will Carmina every know all the answers?  No, but she seem to have a pretty good idea.

The audio, is smooth and the story line if well paced.  I was horrified to listen to what happened to this family.  Recommended.