Talk Talk
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Narrated by:
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T. Coraghessan Boyle
The first time he saw Dana she was dancing barefoot, her hair aflame in the red glow of the club, her body throbbing with rhythms and cross-rhythms that only she could hear. He was mesmerized. That night they were both deaf, mouthing to each other over the booming bass. And it was not until their first date, after he had agonized over what CD to play in the car, that Bridger learned that her deafness was profound and permanent. By then he was falling in love.
Now she is in a courtroom, her legs shackled, as a list of charges is read out. She is accused of assault with a deadly weapon, auto theft and passing bad checks, among other things. Clearly there has been a terrible mistake. A man–his name is William “Peck” Wilson, as Dana and Bridger eventually learn–has been living a blameless life of criminal excess at her expense. And as Dana and Bridger set out to find him, they begin to test to its very limits the life they have begun to build together.
TALK, TALK is both a suspenseful chase across America and a moving story about language, love and identity, from one of America’s most versatile and entertaining novelists.©2006 T.C. Boyle; (P)Books On Tape
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Critic reviews
“A tense thriller . . . Talk Talk opens at full throttle and never slackens.”—San Francisco Chronicle
“Talk Talk stands out as nothing short of an uncomfortable masterpiece—as simultaneously overwhelming, treacherous, beautiful, and boiling over with hellacious revelation as its ultimate subject: life in twentieth-century America.”—Los Angeles Times
“Funny, engaging, and suspenseful.”—The New York Times
“His most exciting novel yet . . . Boyle knows how to drill down through the surface of everyday life into our core anxieties, and he knows how to write constantly charging, heart-thumping chase scenes.”—The Washington Post
“Boyle takes the reader on a wild ride. . . . No one writes better about the wages of American sin.”—The New York Times Book Review
“Starts off fast and never lets go . . . Boyle once again delivers an entertaining story with his usual laser commentary—about the way we identify ourselves and the role language plays.”—USA Today
“Outrageously talented . . . When Boyle finds the delicate balance between his over-the-top satirical impulses and his startling sentimentality, no American novelist can touch him. . . [Talk Talk] flies along on the power of Boyle’s propulsive and exquisitely perceptive prose.”—Entertainment Weekly
“A chilling literary thriller.”—New York Daily News
“A dandy novel, complete with the timely subject of identity theft. . . . Talk Talk rarely falters, the sentences sharp and the characters well defined.”—The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
“Talk Talk makes the lurking danger of identify theft a dizzying reality. . . . A tricky novel of unlikely intimacies.”—O, The Oprah Magazine
“Talk Talk stands out as nothing short of an uncomfortable masterpiece—as simultaneously overwhelming, treacherous, beautiful, and boiling over with hellacious revelation as its ultimate subject: life in twentieth-century America.”—Los Angeles Times
“Funny, engaging, and suspenseful.”—The New York Times
“His most exciting novel yet . . . Boyle knows how to drill down through the surface of everyday life into our core anxieties, and he knows how to write constantly charging, heart-thumping chase scenes.”—The Washington Post
“Boyle takes the reader on a wild ride. . . . No one writes better about the wages of American sin.”—The New York Times Book Review
“Starts off fast and never lets go . . . Boyle once again delivers an entertaining story with his usual laser commentary—about the way we identify ourselves and the role language plays.”—USA Today
“Outrageously talented . . . When Boyle finds the delicate balance between his over-the-top satirical impulses and his startling sentimentality, no American novelist can touch him. . . [Talk Talk] flies along on the power of Boyle’s propulsive and exquisitely perceptive prose.”—Entertainment Weekly
“A chilling literary thriller.”—New York Daily News
“A dandy novel, complete with the timely subject of identity theft. . . . Talk Talk rarely falters, the sentences sharp and the characters well defined.”—The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
“Talk Talk makes the lurking danger of identify theft a dizzying reality. . . . A tricky novel of unlikely intimacies.”—O, The Oprah Magazine
Boyle is in the first part of the book too rapid. He slows down some as the book goes on.
On substance, the protagonist and her boyfriend are barely tolerable. It is hard to sympathize with them. They whine constantly and are too self-absorbed. Boyle voice makes their whiny complaints worse. I know some people are like but not everyone. And to have all 3 main characters (the bad guy is the same, but you expect it from him) is unwelcome to a reader who wants to like somebody in the book.
The author has each of the 3 main characters asking themselves rhetorical questions in a complaining voice again about life's oddities probably 30 times for each one. Really irritating. Again, why all three?
Finally, the author doesn't do a credible or clear job of explaining how the identity thief has so much money and so many valuable assets.
Boyle is a great writer but at best this one should be read in the traditional hardcopy mode.
get a professional reader
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Worth the reading
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The book is interesting as a character study of the narcissitic nature of this criminal's personality, but not a "page-turner", and the ending, which just seems to "happen" rather suddenly, is wholly disappointing.
Professional narrator needed
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Annoying Narration
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And while I don't really like to quibble about endings, as things have to turn out one way or another, I thought this one was under-developed.
But still an excellent listen, and very well-crafted, with vivid images and strong character development.
Too Much Talk
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