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The Bartender's Tale
- Narrated by: David Aaron Baker
- Length: 14 hrs and 47 mins
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Too profain.
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A Time in the Mountains.
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Remember when the Waltons made you feel good?
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Publisher's summary
Audie Award Nominee, Fiction, 2013
Time and again, Ivan Doig has proven himself to be a treasure of American letters. Critical darlings and New York Times best sellers, his novels target the heart of the human experience and never miss the mark.
The Bartender' s Tale stars Tom Harry and his 12-year-old son, Rusty, who live alone and run a bar in a small Montana town in the early 1960s. Their lives are upended when Proxy, a woman from Tom's past, and her beatnik daughter, Francine, breeze into town. Is Francine, as Proxy claims, the unsuspected legacy of her and Tom’s past? Without a doubt she is an unsettling gust of the future, upending every certainty in Rusty’s life and generating a mist of passion and pretense that seems to obscure everyone’s vision but his own.
As Rusty struggles to decipher the oddities of adult behavior and the mysteries build toward a reckoning, Ivan Doig wonderfully captures how the world becomes bigger and the past becomes more complex in the last moments of childhood.
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A supervolcanic eruption in Yellowstone Park sends lava and mud flowing toward populated areas, and clouds of ash drifting across the country. The fallout destroys crops and livestock, clogs machinery, and makes cities uninhabitable. Those who survive find themselves caught in an apocalyptic catastrophe in which humanity has no choice but to rise from the ashes and recreate the world.
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Jerky horrible narration.
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By: Harry Turtledove
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Rain Dogs
- By: Sean Doolittle
- Narrated by: Basil Sands
- Length: 7 hrs and 2 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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It was one hell of an inheritance for former Chicago reporter Tom Coleman: a broken-down pickup truck, ramshackle campground, a canoe livery - and one pot-smoking, barely working employee he doesn’t need, doesn’t want, and can’t afford. But the truth is, after losing a child and a marriage, Tom doesn’t really care.
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Narration is awful
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By: Sean Doolittle
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Maybe the Moon
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- Narrated by: Armistead Maupin
- Length: 5 hrs and 50 mins
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
All of 31 inches tall, Cady is a true survivor in a town where, as she says, "you can die of encouragement". Her early starring role as a lovable elf in an immensely popular American film proved a major disappointment, since moviegoers never saw the face behind the stifling rubber suit she was required to wear. Now, after a decade of hollow promises from the Industry, she is reduced to performing at birthday parties and bat mitzvahs as she waits for the miracle that will finally make her a star.
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short but good
- By Charlene on 08-06-07
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The Hum and the Shiver
- The Tufa Novels, Book 1
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No one knows where the Tufa came from or how they ended up in the mountains of east Tennessee. When the first Europeans came to the Smoky Mountains, the Tufa were already there. Dark-haired and enigmatic, they live quietly in the hills and valleys of Cloud County, their origins lost to history. But there are clues in their music, hidden in the songs they have passed down for generations.
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Excellent story that combines music and folklore
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By: Alex Bledsoe
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Vegas Rich
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- Narrated by: Laural Merlington
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With a heart full of dreams, Sallie Coleman leaves Texas and heads west determined to get as far from the squalor of her dirt poor beginnings. With its shifting sands, smoky saloons, and bingo palaces, Las Vegas seems like a paradise. A paradise where an extraordinary twist of fate makes Sallie the most powerful businesswoman in Nevada.
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Get this booK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
- By Amazon Customer on 09-26-10
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A Cold Day for Murder
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Eighteen months ago, Aleut Kate Shugak quit her job investigating sex crimes for the Anchorage DA’s office and retreated to her father’s homestead in a national park in the interior of Alaska. But the world has a way of beating a path to her door, however remote. In the middle of one of the bitterest Decembers in recent memory ex-boss — and ex-lover — Jack Morgan shows up with an FBI agent in tow.
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Kate & Mutt Kick Ass
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By: Dana Stabenow
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A Wicked Slice
- A Lee Ofsted Mystery
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Aaron Elkins, the author of the Edgar-winning Old Bones, teamed up with his wife, Charlotte, to fashion this lighthearted mystery - a fictional look at the less glamorous side of a golf tour. In this first Lee Ofsted mystery, Lee is a "rabbit" golfer in the Pacific-Western Women's Pro-Am. She made it into the tournament by the skin of her teeth and suddenly she can't keep her long drives from slicing - veering sharply to the right. She is hitting the ball perfectly and it simply isn't going where it is supposed to.
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UGH...
- By Lifeisshort on 07-18-14
By: Aaron Elkins, and others
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Our Story Begins
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Performance
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Wolff here returns with fresh revelations - about biding one's time, or experiencing first love, or burying one's mother - that come to a variety of characters in circumstances at once everyday and extraordinary. A retired Marine enrolls in college while her son trains for Iraq. A lawyer takes a difficult deposition. An American in Rome indulges the Gypsy who's picked his pocket.
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Great
- By chris on 04-11-08
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Revised Fundamentals of Caregiving
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Benjamin Benjamin has lost virtually everything - his wife, his family, his home, his livelihood. With few options, Ben enrolls in a night class called The Fundamentals of Caregiving taught in the basement of a local church. There Ben is instructed in the art of inserting catheters and avoiding liability and how to keep physical and emotional distance between client and provider. But when Ben is assigned to 19-year-old Trev, he discovers that the endless mnemonics and service plan checklists have done little to prepare him.
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Unlike!
- By Pamela Harvey on 01-02-13
By: Jonathan Evison
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Player Piano
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Overall
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Performance
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Kurt Vonnegut's first novel spins the chilling tale of engineer Paul Proteus, who must find a way to live in a world dominated by a supercomputer and run completely by machines. Paul's rebellion is vintage Vonnegut – wildly funny, deadly serious, and terrifyingly close to reality.
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A Genuine 5-Stars
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By: Kurt Vonnegut
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Too profain.
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Not to my liking!
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Like a warm blanket on a chilly night.
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Lyrical - wonderfully done
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What listeners say about The Bartender's Tale
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- B.J.
- 03-08-13
If you love a good story ...
this is your book. Ivan Doig has been called "The New Wallace Stegner" for a long time. I love Wallace Stegner, so I take that comparison seriously. There have always been similar threads, but never has the quality of the writing been as close to - or better than Stegner's - than in this book.
Doig has a way of writing about small events and everyday people that makes even an annual fishing event sound interesting. (Perfect example is a "bit" he wrote about looking for ticks. I never would have guessed there was a story in that. There is when it's in Doig's hands and it's funny.) I also think there's an element of autobiography in this one with Rusty, the young narrator.
I love the crisp writing, the use of local jargon - as he calls it "lingua America" - and the bits of history woven in for good measure. I love the 87 ways he can allude to sex without ever getting into the nitty gritty of it. But I especially love his characters - so real you can almost reach out and touch them.
There's a special feeling you get with certain books. The characters come and live at your house while you're listening. Rusty and his dad have been at my house the last few days and I miss them terribly now that they're gone. Very few books measure up to this in terms of pure, good writing. It's such a joy.
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33 people found this helpful
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- Mark
- 04-07-13
a sweet, old fashioned coming-of-age story
Most of this story happens in the summer of 1960. Tom Harry is a bartender in rural Montana, and lives with his son, Rusty. Rusty is twelve years old, and loves his life with his single father, living above their bar. During that summer, twelve year-old Zoe moves to town and befriends Rusty. Twenty-something Delano also moves to town working on an Americana oral history project and connects with Rusty and his father. This is a sweet, slow-moving story, much like life in that small town at that time. I enjoyed being part of that time and seeing the world from Rusty's innocent eyes. The reader was great, with distinctive voices for all the main characters. I really enjoyed listening to this story, and rate the story as a 4+. My only criticisms - it felt a bit similar to other rural coming-of-age stories, and lacked any sharp edges to take it out of that comfortable idyllic world. That said, I still thoroughly enjoyed it. One more comment - the book promo talks about Proxy and his daughter coming into the lives of Tom and Rusty. I was waiting for that to happen, thinking it would be central to this story. It does not occur until the book is 3/4 over. Rusty's relationship to his father and his bar, and his friendship with Zoe are much more central to this book.
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28 people found this helpful
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- Nancy
- 03-26-13
I just don't want this book to end!
Would you listen to The Bartender's Tale again? Why?
Yes, I would listen again, and again, and again. I'm not sure which I enjoyed more, the narrator or the story, but both entwine to make this one of the nicest stories I've ever listen to. David Aaron Baker nailed the accents and innuendos of each character, and their are a lot of them.
Who was your favorite character and why?
The story is wrapped around the adolescent years of a Midwestern boy in the sixties.. His life is not all that unusual, but unfolds in a way that you don't want to miss a single adventure.
If you were to make a film of this book, what would be the tag line be?
The Bartender's Tale; straight up with a twist!
Any additional comments?
Read or listen to this story! I read it based on the publisher's comments: "Time and again, Ivan Doig has proven himself to be a treasure of American letters. Critical darlings and New York Times best sellers, his novels target the heart of the human experience and never miss the mark." Absolutely true!!!
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19 people found this helpful
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- Elizabeth
- 06-18-13
I loved being read to!
I thoroughly enjoyed this audiobook. The narrator was perfect. I felt like he was personally telling me a story. I have listened to one other book by Ivan Doig and hope to listen to many more. The story was poignant, quirky and made me giggle out loud many times. Such a "feel good" book.
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14 people found this helpful
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- Adele in CBus
- 05-15-13
Such an enjoyable listen
An engaging, well-written small town coming-of-age story taking place in 1960. I just love it when a great story is combined with a great narrator, this is why I love audiobooks.
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12 people found this helpful
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- Kathy in CA
- 07-19-13
I just love Doig's tales!
I always know I am in for a great yarn when I listen to an Ivan Doig book. This one centers on the relationship between a father and son living in rural Montana in the 1960's. The narrator did an excellent job of capturing the western feel of the book.
While I certainly did enjoy this story, it was not as good as my favorite Doig book, "Dancing at the Rascal Fair". This book, in comparison, did not have the compelling characters and emotional impact that "Rascal Faire" did for me. None the less, "The Bartender's Tale" is a good, solid coming of age story and much more.
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8 people found this helpful
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- Janice
- 07-30-13
Slow start, strong finish
My first from this author, chosen because of the obvious affection many reviewers have for his work. I have more mixed feelings because I felt his writing was somewhat uneven. On the positive side, his ability to convey sense of place and time is excellent and his characters are well portrayed and real, especially the warm and genuine father/son relationship between Tom and Rusty. Telling a story through the eyes of children is tricky, and that’s where Doig has some hits and misses. The honesty of young Rusty’s fear of abandonment is visceral and moving. But when Rusty and his friend Zoe go into their theatrical shtick, it suddenly hits false and annoying notes. Although their friendship feels organic, too often their dialogues sound forced and phoney.
The narration doesn’t help on that score, as Baker is only marginal in his voices. A previous reviewer’s reference to a Mickey Mouse voice for the young historical researcher is no exaggeration and that key character unfortunately is excruciating to listen to. Baker has (literally) squeaked out a 3 rating from me on the strength of Tom’s rough no-nonsense voice and Rusty’s natural earnestness (when he’s not trying to growl out Sam Spade dialogue to be cool). The supporting cast voices are fifty-fifty.
The first ¾’s of the book is a lazily told narrative of the fairly unremarkable events of one summer. As pleasant as this was in acquainting us with the various personalities, I worried that it would just sort of drift into autumn without really sharing anything of note. The final 3 hours finally connects the dots of the groundwork already laid with events and revelations explaining why this was a milestone year for Rusty. By then I was fully familiar and invested in the characters and cared about their fate. What was in danger of a mediocre 3 rating improved to a 4 with a strong finish.
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6 people found this helpful
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- Molly-o
- 11-02-13
Why do good books have to end?
I have read many of Ivan Doig's books because I love Montana and the way Doig tells a story with characters that I feel like I have met sometime in my life. Some of his books are more successful than others; The Bartender's Tale is one of his best. Once again, Doig spins a tale of a simple life with complex flavors and, again, I didn't want this book to stop. David Baker is excellent in catching the sounds and pauses of the characters so well that I was immersed in that life and how the story unfolded. This is a sweet story, a story about a wonderful young man and his Dad, his best girl friend and all the other gems and crazies that one might come across in a bar in Montana. Ivan Doig, thank you for this gift.
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5 people found this helpful
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- Mark
- 05-14-13
Outstanding Narration Brings Everything to Life
David Aaron Baker reads this story extremely well. As well written as it is, and how well each character is developed, I doubt I would've been nearly as interested without Baker's telling, his great and distinct voices (with the exception of one ridiculously Mickey Mouse sounding voice), and the heart that lies behind everything he says. Ivan Doig describes each character and surrounding so well it's easy to imagine the town, and the people. The story itself isn't particularly memorable, but I still cared about the characters.
Overall, worth a listen, just not something that'll stick with you very long after.
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- Tim
- 06-14-13
PG-12
The Bartender's Tale by Ivan Doig is not for everyone beyond a certain age. If I had a son or daughter that wanted to read something for the summer before they start sixth grade in the fall, I would let them read this one just because it is so innocent. Other than that, I wouldn't touch this book with a 10 foot pole because I already passed 6th grade long time ago. The story reminds me something from the Hardy Boys' series. It's very simple and age appropriate for tween demographic.
I was seeking for a different read from Audible. I should had known better when most of the reviewers still has their wisdom teeth when they wrote their awesome reviews.
I will avoid this author in the future for sure just because I'm too old at reading these kinds of stuff and I'm still having a hard time at understanding the title. There is no stories from the bartender at all.
It's PG-12 at best, about a 12 year old coming to age and his adventures involving his dad that runs a bar, his "friend" who is a girl and a much older sister from another mother. The story is very much like My Girl with Macaulay Culkin.
Just innocent.
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3 people found this helpful