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neil

FORT PIERCE, FL, United States | Member Since 2008

167
HELPFUL VOTES
  • 32 reviews
  • 124 ratings
  • 532 titles in library
  • 11 purchased in 2013
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FOLLOWERS
9

  • Redemption Ark

    • UNABRIDGED (27 hrs and 18 mins)
    • By Alastair Reynolds
    • Narrated By John Lee
    Overall
    (652)
    Performance
    (380)
    Story
    (385)

    Late in the 26th century, the human race has advanced enough to accidentally trigger the Inhibitors---alien-killing machines designed to detect intelligent life and destroy it. The only hope for humanity lies in the recovery of a secret cache of doomsday weapons---and a renegade named Clavain who is determined to find them. But other factions want the weapons for their own purposes---and the weapons themselves have another agenda altogether.

    Michael says: "Stick with this series!"
    "SERIOUSLY GOOD SF"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    I tried reading "Revelation Space" over a year or two ago and put it down quickly. Very "dense" stuff.", I thought. "Too
    complicated". I then I picked up "Absolution Gap" in print. I knew by then it was the last in the series but so what? After the first chapter, I couldn't put it down. So, I got the others on
    Audible. Each one in the series can easily stand by itself but its a great series. All are beautifully written.
    They are tightly plotted, highly and originally imagined with empathic characters who play their parts honestly, without any contrived motives.
    Each book is an equal of the others, which, for a
    series, shows, I think, an author who truly cares
    about his audience. I have been an avid SF reader
    for nearly 60 years. In my opinion, this series
    is a masterwork. It is to hard SF what "Lord of
    The Rings" is to fantasy. In my opinion, the author is in the first rank of the very best of all English language novelists, based on this series.


    0 of 0 people found this review helpful
  • Blue Remembered Earth

    • UNABRIDGED (21 hrs and 49 mins)
    • By Alastair Reynolds
    • Narrated By Kobna Holdbrook-Smith
    • Whispersync for Voice-ready
    Overall
    (97)
    Performance
    (91)
    Story
    (90)

    Critically acclaimed author Alastair Reynolds holds a well-deserved place “among the leaders of the hard-science space opera renaissance." (Publishers Weekly). In Blue Remembered Earth, Geoffrey Akinya wants nothing more than to study the elephants of the Amboseli basin. But when his space-explorer grandmother dies, secrets come to light and Geoffrey is dispatched to the Moon to protect the family name - and prevent an impending catastrophe.

    Michael G. Kurilla says: "A surprising and staisfying departure for Reynolds"
    "Politically Correct"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    I've read most of what Allistair Reynolds has published...some more than once.
    I've rated him as one of the best hard core SF writers ever. His major characters are often "different". Heroes and villains are as likely to be female as male with various
    degrees of sex, color, species differences and artifacts often added on. Even as truly different as some of his main characters were, I have never before gotten the impression that he was forcing them into being politically correct stereotypes. That is the impression I get in this novel.
    The good guys, male and female, (almost too good to be true, in some cases) are African and black sounding, or clearly homosexual with contemporary nilistic outlooks while the bad guys are made to sound like mostly white, male Afrikaners and and are comletely contemptible, evil, money grubbers. The heroic types seem motivated only by a one dimensional need to do "good" (as defined by contemporary standards like ...save the elephants...for instance).
    Of course, in their quest to do these good deeds, the author does not bind them to
    to any special respect for preexisting norms and rules that get in their way, except those imposed by the villains. Both sides are also very rich, which seems to be, in a almost
    contradictory fashion, a perfectly acceptable reason to allow them to do what they please.
    As I've said, I can enjoy heroes and villains, any sex, any color, any background...if
    the writer can make me believe that they are real "human beings" even if that
    isn't exactly what they are. Reynold's has done that very thing with pigs, among a number of other not so human creatures, in some of his other works. Their human attributes...good and bad and neither...seemed not only richly complex but to be natural parts of their nature.
    The problem with this novel for me is that the characters in these pages are caricatures of politically correct stereotypes. That makes it impossible to care about
    what they seem to care about. And what they care about, of course, drives the whole story. John Lee does a good job with the narration, as usual.
    Overall, this is not a Reynold's novel I would consider reading a second time.

    0 of 1 people found this review helpful
  • A Prayer for Owen Meany

    • UNABRIDGED (27 hrs and 20 mins)
    • By John Irving
    • Narrated By Joe Barrett
    Overall
    (2600)
    Performance
    (1638)
    Story
    (1630)

    In the summer of 1953, two 11-year-old boys - best friends - are playing in a Little League baseball game in Gravesend, New Hampshire. One of the boys hits a foul ball that kills the other boy's mother. The boy who hits the ball doesn't believe in accidents; Owen Meany believes he is God's instrument. What happens to Owen, after that 1953 foul ball, is extraordinary and terrifying.

    Alan says: "Outstanding"
    "Offbeat Gem"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    Worth every minute of the time I spent listening to it. It isn't likely that I would have picked it up and read it, but since Joe Barrett was narrating and the description and many of the reviews piqued my interest. I decided to get the Audible version. Made a great choice, this time. Maybe it helped that I am a native of small town New England, myself or that the
    two main protagonists are within a year or two of being my age. Also the "major"
    events that affected them, affected me, as well. The novel was a sort of personal homecoming. But, besides those elements, Irving seems to be a very good writer who
    knows how to keep a reader involved in his work for hours and hours. Nor does
    he ever disappoint with sloppy transitions, simpleton characters or artificial plot
    contrivances. Not that some of his ideas don't stretch things more than a bit. But he
    always manages to pull these bits off very nicely. How he tells the reader what happens
    at the end before the book is halfway through and still manages to keep one in total
    suspense is absolutely masterly. And Joe Barret is one of, if not the best American narrator I've ever heard. (Try "Streets of Loredo" by Larry McMurtry for another great
    Joe Barrett narration.)
    This novel will not be universally appreciated, I believe. But I thought it was
    excellent.

    0 of 0 people found this review helpful
  • Armor

    • UNABRIDGED (13 hrs and 37 mins)
    • By John Steakley
    • Narrated By Tom Weiner
    Overall
    (783)
    Performance
    (414)
    Story
    (420)

    The planet is called Banshee. The air is unbreathable, the water poisonous. It is the home of the most implacable enemies that humanity, in all its interstellar expansion, has ever encountered. Felix is a scout in A-team Two. Highly competent, he is the sole survivor of mission after mission. Yet he is a man consumed by fear and hatred.

    George Dean says: "An intense and unusual work, wonderfully performed"
    "Bad Writing, Period."
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    Like some others, first part was ok and fast moving...nice light read (listen) for washing the kitchen floor or peeling potatoes. Maybe the end turned out as well. I couldn't tell you because the introduction of the second, inane plot and the adolescent writing was too much for these old ears...Tom Weiner's narration nowithstanding (he did the best with what he had)....and I gave it up. By the way, if you want to see how to do a competent "intro of a new plot right out of left field after a story line has already been established", read :"The Five Fingers of Death". Several other reviewers have already written about why this book is so very bad. I will only add that my own disappointment was compounded because this book actually started out ok and I had gotten into it by several hours before the switch.

    1 of 2 people found this review helpful
  • The Heroes

    • UNABRIDGED (22 hrs and 44 mins)
    • By Joe Abercrombie
    • Narrated By Michael Page
    • Whispersync for Voice-ready
    Overall
    (601)
    Performance
    (428)
    Story
    (431)

    They say Black Dow has killed more men than winter and clawed his way to the throne of the North up a hill of skulls. The King of the Union, ever a jealous neighbor, is not about to stand by smiling while Black Dow claws his way any higher. The orders have been given, and the armies are toiling through the northern mud. Thousands of men are converging on a forgotten ring of stones, on a worthless hill, in an unimportant valley, and they've brought a lot of sharpened metal with them.

    Matt Carothers says: "Thank you, Joe Abercrombie!"
    "Another Winner From Joe Abercrombie"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    Another "chapter" from the world of Joe Abercrombie and a good one. I consider that
    this guy is better at this kind of writing than anyone else, including the more
    popular and alleged "masters" of this genre like George RR Martin. However, Michael
    Page is not a favorite of mine, Brit or not. I tire of his narration rather quickly. If
    Steven Pacey had read it...as he read the first 4 of Abercrombie's novels set
    in this world, I would have undoubtedly given it 5 stars.

    0 of 2 people found this review helpful
  • JR

    • UNABRIDGED (37 hrs and 46 mins)
    • By William Gaddis
    • Narrated By Nick Sullivan
    Overall
    (42)
    Performance
    (28)
    Story
    (28)

    Absurdly logical, mercilessly real, gathering it's own tumultuous momentum for the ultimate brush with commodity training, JR captures the listener in the cacophony of voices that revolves around this young captive of his own myths. The disturbing clarity with which this finished writer captures the ways in which we deal, dissemble, and stumble through our words - through our lives - while the real plans are being made elsewhere makes JR the extraordinary novel that it is.

    Brad says: "An Audiobook Landmark"
    "This Is Good Stuff"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    This is the first example of "literature as an art form"
    writing that I can ever remember actually enjoying. And I really, really liked this. I never came across anything quite like it, before. And just how much the narrator was
    responsible for how much I liked it...maybe more than 50%. Nick Sullivan truly
    deserves the word "incredible" to describe how he carries this story from start to
    finish. I've never heard of or read William Gaddis before listening to Mr. Sullivan
    doing "JR". By this reading, Gaddis seems like a giant of American letters, a
    genuine master artist of the written word.
    If you insist on straightforward plotting and rapid pace...forget it. The work is looong
    and meanders along routes that don't appear on any literary maps. But it does move
    along. Its sometimes sad, sometimes funny, sometimes pessimistic, sometimes
    uplifting...but for me, it was never dull. Mr. Gaddis and Mr. Sullivan combine to
    produce as honest and entertaining a picture of the American dream as I've ever read.
    Or heard.

    1 of 1 people found this review helpful
  • Child 44

    • UNABRIDGED (12 hrs and 24 mins)
    • By Tom Rob Smith
    • Narrated By Dennis Boutsikaris
    • Whispersync for Voice-ready
    Overall
    (1578)
    Performance
    (483)
    Story
    (479)

    It is a society that is, officially, a paradise. Superior to the decadent West, Stalin's Soviet Union is a haven for its citizens, providing for all of their needs: education, health care, security. In exchange, all that is required is their hard work, and their loyalty and faith to the Soviet State. But now a murderer is on the loose.

    Melvin says: "Terror from all sides."
    "First Rate...Until The Finale"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    This novel has a great many good things going for it...it works on several levels (political
    thriller, detective story, character study...), good characterizations, clever plot working,
    nicely detailed, and well paced. Then comes the ending.
    It seemed like the author either couldn't figure out how to end it or just got
    tired of the story. Most of the novel before the last few chapters was imaginative
    and flowed based on the realistic motives and actions of the characters. The ending,however, seemed glued together with glitter paste. It was much too "cute" and contrived to make much impact or sense...in a society where no man can trust another,
    "they lived happily ever after" does not work. And when the good guy goes toe
    to toe with the villian...how did that happen?
    Maybe because the first 90% was very good, I felt so let down by the ending. The
    narrator was excellent and mainly stayed on key for the whole reading. I certainly
    recommend listening to the book...even with the contrived ending, its a very good
    novel.

    0 of 0 people found this review helpful
  • Let Me In

    • UNABRIDGED (16 hrs and 54 mins)
    • By John Ajvide Lindqvist
    • Narrated By Steven Pacey
    Overall
    (364)
    Performance
    (190)
    Story
    (191)

    Let Me In is the horrific tale of Oskar and Eli. It begins with the grizzly discovery of the body of a teenage boy, emptied of blood. Twelve-year-old Oskar is personally hoping that revenge has come at long last - revenge for all the bad things the bullies at school do to him. While Oskar is fascinated by the murder, it is not the most important thing in his life. A new girl has moved in next door. They become friends. Then something more. But there is something wrong with her, something odd.

    neil says: "Not for everyone"
    "Not for everyone"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    This is a very dark book, indeed. And it describes a very bleak, modern world...today's
    world, in fact, even though the locale is suburban Sweden. One has to wade through
    emotional sewers in places to reach the end...which is not all that pretty, either.
    But if one has the stomach for it, it is a very good novel. I don't like vampire tales for
    the most part, especially the multitudes of soft core porn trash that's currently in vogue using that theme. But this book is outside that box. It places important moral
    issues and considerations in front of the reader without losing a beat in the story.
    The characters, some just plain awful people, all demonstrate individual breadths of humanity...some mostly evil, others more good than bad, but the author never sticks
    in a paper cut out. The plot flows and one doesn't have to struggle to follow it even
    though,, to me, it lead to places I've never been to before. I gave the story only 4 stars.
    Maybe it deserved 5...but it was just too dark for me to do that.
    The narrator, Steven Pacey, is, as far as I'm concerned, the best reader I have ever
    heard...no exceptions. He brings out the very best in whatever book he narrates,
    Read by someone else, I doubt that I would have enjoyed this book so much.
    .

    10 of 10 people found this review helpful
  • Monster Hunter International

    • UNABRIDGED (23 hrs and 34 mins)
    • By Larry Correia
    • Narrated By Oliver Wyman
    Overall
    (3924)
    Performance
    (3340)
    Story
    (3331)

    Five days after Owen Zastava Pitt pushed his insufferable boss out of a 14th story window, he woke up in the hospital with a scarred face, an unbelievable memory, and a job offer. It turns out that monsters are real. All the things from myth, legend, and B-movies are out there, waiting in the shadows. Some of them are evil, and some are just hungry. Monster Hunter International is the premier eradication company in the business. And now Owen is their newest recruit.

    Mariya says: "Killin’s my business and business is fine"
    "Trite stuff"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    A twelve year old or younger boy might like it. Trite subplots combined to sort
    of make a story...this didn't take much talent to write, I think. Seems to have
    been written so the author could start his own multi-volumed series. Excep;t for
    pounding in the message that "capitalism and free enterprise" trump all else, character's
    motivation was, frankly, cartoonish. As were characters, themselves. Can't decide
    whether narrator helped or hindered book. I couldn't finish it. And, I tried.

    1 of 6 people found this review helpful
  • The Civil War: A Narrative, Volume III, Red River to Appomattox

    • UNABRIDGED (48 hrs and 1 min)
    • By Shelby Foote
    • Narrated By Grover Gardner
    Overall
    (681)
    Performance
    (236)
    Story
    (237)

    In the third and last volume of this vivid history, Shelby Foote brings to a close the story of four years of turmoil and strife which altered American life forever. Here, told in rich narrative and as seen from both sides, are those climactic struggles, great and small, on and off the field of battle, which finally decided the fate of this nation.

    Tad Davis says: "Incredible"
    "History Done Superbly"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    I've just finished Volume III. The whole trilogy deserves the same 5 stars. Not since I
    saw Ken Burn's PBS "The Civil War" have I come across anything nearly as well done and
    entertaining. I don't recall how long the other two volumes were (nearly as long or longer, maybe)
    but not one of those hours disappointed me. Sometimes I'd get a little confused...so much action, so
    many characters, hard to keep it straight in my mind all the time...but then I'd go back a little
    and hear the part again and I'd get back on track. Altogether magnificent storytelling.
    Grover Gardner kept it all moving and fresh and even, exciting for me. A pleasant and well
    paced narration. He made it all live, again. Glad I get to keep the set.
    I have a colleague at work from India who is a true student of the modern American scene.
    After I started reading Foote's work, it occured to me that today's US cannot really be
    understood unless one understood that war and the context it was fought in and the consequences
    of it. I highly recommended it to him.

    1 of 1 people found this review helpful
  • Market Forces

    • UNABRIDGED (15 hrs and 43 mins)
    • By Richard K. Morgan
    • Narrated By Simon Vance
    • Whispersync for Voice-ready
    Overall
    (357)
    Performance
    (82)
    Story
    (83)

    What do you buy and sell when the global markets reach saturation point? The markets themselves. Thirty years from now the big players in global capitalism have moved on from commodities. The big money is in conflict investment. The corporations keep a careful watch on the wars of liberation and revolution that burn constantly around the world. They guage who the winners will be and sell them arms, intelligence, and power. In return for a slice of the action when the war is won.

    Gary Godman says: "Good easy listen"
    "Well written, Well read."
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    This book reads like a classic...could end up being one, I think. Morgan does stretch one's imagination
    and ability to buy into some of his concepts pretty hard, but he never snaps the chord.
    His characters play the scenes like real humans...human strengths, weaknesses, all there
    to drive the story line to its not so simple, thought provoking, conclusion. There's hints that the hero has a bit of "super" ability to drive a car. I dislike "superpower" junk. Also, his wife as his personal super competent mechanic was a bit of a klunker. But Morgan managed to keep the whole peice in the right key, even so.
    Simon Vance played it all with perfect pace and pitch. First rate narration. Consistent, too.
    Overall, SF as I think it should be. Up there with the real good ones.
    PS...The above praise does not apply to some of his other works which, frankly, contain every
    element it takes to make genuine stinkers. Those include everything in the " Takeshi
    Kovacs" series.

    0 of 0 people found this review helpful

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