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Messenger
- Narrated by: David Morse
- Length: 3 hrs and 44 mins
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Though the dystopian genre focuses on the world’s degeneration, these fantastical, exploratory, and poignant titles often have the power to reveal something significant about the world listeners live in now. No matter the dystopia conjured in a selection, their creators enable us to explore human nature and safely reflect on our own reality. Here are the 10 best dystopian audiobooks to transport, unsettle, and perhaps even inspire.
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Great Story, Horrible Narration
- By KathyDB on 03-24-15
By: Kim Wilkins
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The Samurai's Garden
- A Novel
- By: Gail Tsukiyama
- Narrated by: David Shih
- Length: 8 hrs and 48 mins
- Unabridged
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The daughter of a Chinese mother and a Japanese father, Gail Tsukiyama uses the Japanese invasion of China during the late 1930s as a somber backdrop for her unusual story about a 20-year-old Chinese painter named Stephen who is sent to his family's summer home in a Japanese coastal village to recover from a bout with tuberculosis. Here he is cared for by Matsu, a reticent housekeeper and a master gardener. Over the course of a remarkable year, Stephen learns Matsu's secret and gains not only physical strength, but also profound spiritual insight.
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A Novel Painted with a Master's Brush
- By Bay Area Califa on 06-25-18
By: Gail Tsukiyama
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The Art of Hearing Heartbeats
- A Novel
- By: Jan-Philipp Sendker
- Narrated by: Cassandra Campbell
- Length: 9 hrs and 27 mins
- Unabridged
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When a successful New York lawyer suddenly disappears without a trace, neither his wife nor his daughter Julia has any idea where he might be - until they find a love letter he wrote many years ago to a Burmese woman they have never heard of. Intent on solving the mystery and coming to terms with her father’s past, Julia decides to travel to the village where the woman lived. There she uncovers a tale of unimaginable hardship, resilience, and passion that will reaffirm the listener’s belief in the power of love to move mountains.
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Basic Story Interesting, But...
- By Monica on 06-04-13
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Lamp Black, Wolf Grey
- A Novel
- By: Paula Brackston
- Narrated by: Marisa Calin
- Length: 10 hrs and 30 mins
- Unabridged
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Artist Laura Matthews finds her new home in the Welsh mountains to be a place so charged with tales and legends that she is able to reach through the gossamer-fine veil that separates her own world from that of myth and fable. She and her husband, Dan, have given up their city life and moved to Blaencwm, an ancient longhouse high in the hills. Here, she hopes that the wild beauty will inspire her to produce her best art and will give her the baby they have longed for.
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Just plain silly
- By Jennifer S Lewis on 08-10-18
By: Paula Brackston
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Archangel
- Samaria, Book 1
- By: Sharon Shinn
- Narrated by: Tamara Marston
- Length: 17 hrs and 8 mins
- Unabridged
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A tale of the distant future by the author of The Shape-Changer's Wife brings listeners to a world in which the fate of all life rests on the voice of an angel.
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An All-TIme Favorite
- By Carol on 02-27-11
By: Sharon Shinn
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Copper Sun
- By: Sharon M. Draper
- Narrated by: Myra Lucretia Taylor
- Length: 8 hrs and 55 mins
- Unabridged
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Fifteen-year-old Amari witnesses the murder of her family and the destruction of her remote African village. She endures countless humiliations as she is beaten, branded, and forced to board a slave ship. The atrocities continue as she struggles through endless days of backbreaking work and daily degradation on a plantation.
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Wonderful Story
- By Gabrielle on 04-05-11
By: Sharon M. Draper
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The Silver Ship and the Sea
- Silver Ship, Book 1
- By: Brenda Cooper
- Narrated by: Lauren Fortgang
- Length: 15 hrs and 58 mins
- Unabridged
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Chelo Lee, her brother Joseph, and four other young children have been abandoned on the colony planet Fremont. Unfortunate events have left them orphaned in a human colony that abhors genetic engineering - and these six young people are genetically enhanced. With no one to turn to, Chelo and the others must now learn how to use their distinct skills to make this unwelcome planet home - or find a way off it.
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Young Adult - Yet not lacking substance
- By Cody on 06-18-12
By: Brenda Cooper
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Deerskin
- By: Robin McKinley
- Narrated by: Xe Sands
- Length: 11 hrs and 54 mins
- Unabridged
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The only daughter of a beloved king and queen, Princess Lissar has grown up in the shadow of her parents' infinite adoration for each other - an infatuation so great that it could only be broken by the queen's unexpected passing. As Lissar reaches womanhood, it becomes clear to everyone in the kingdom that she has inherited her late mother's breathtaking beauty. But on the eve of her seventeenth birthday, Lissar's exquisite looks become a curse. Betrayed and abused, Lissar is forced to flee her home to escape her father's madness.
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Poor Narrator choice :/
- By Elizabeth on 05-29-18
By: Robin McKinley
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Every Heart a Doorway
- By: Seanan McGuire
- Narrated by: Cynthia Hopkins
- Length: 4 hrs and 44 mins
- Unabridged
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Children have always disappeared under the right conditions - slipping through the shadows under a bed or at the back of a wardrobe, tumbling down rabbit holes and into old wells, and emerging somewhere...else. But magical lands have little need for used-up miracle children. Nancy tumbled once, but now she's back. The things she's experienced...they change a person. The children under Miss West's care understand all too well. And each of them is seeking a way back to their own fantasy world.
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Utterly Moving
- By tm on 07-12-16
By: Seanan McGuire
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Daughter of the Forest
- Sevenwaters, Book 1
- By: Juliet Marillier
- Narrated by: Terry Donnelly
- Length: 26 hrs and 45 mins
- Unabridged
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Lovely Sorcha is the seventh child and only daughter of Lord Colum of Sevenwaters. Bereft of a mother, she is comforted by her six brothers who love and protect her. Sorcha is the light in their lives and they are determined that she know only contentment. But Sorcha's joy is shattered when her father is bewitched by his new wife, an evil enchantress who binds her brothers with a terrible spell, a spell which only Sorcha can lift - by staying silent.
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Compelling story--but only at 1.5x
- By barefoot rabbit on 09-09-13
By: Juliet Marillier
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What listeners say about Messenger
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Jan
- 05-14-12
The Giver stands alone... Messenger needs...
Messenger is actually the end to Gathering Blue and ties the three books together. You need to have read the other two for it to make sense. The Giver to me is the classic and although I am glad to have read the other two, they do not reach as deep or as high for me. Gathering Blue felt unfinished, the end is here in Messenger... but Messenger is short and leaves lots and lots of loose ends unsatisfied for me as well. That said Lois is an incrediable writer and I love her themes, mind and creativty.
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11 people found this helpful
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- Jefferson
- 09-04-17
Allegory, Eucatastrophe, and Unanswered Questions
"Ah hah!" thought I after getting a few chapters into Messenger (2004), when the third book in Lois Lowry's Giver Quartet finally starts making the quartet a quartet in story as well as theme. Messenger shares characters with its isolated predecessors, Jonas from The Giver (1993) and Kira from Gathering Blue (2000) and makes clear that each of the three stories takes place in the same post-apocalypse world of scattered communities that have responded to starting over differently: enforced sameness and suppression of emotion (The Giver), desperate poverty and brutal competition (Gathering Blue), or acceptance of Others and group harmony (Messenger). Each novel features a young protagonist with a special gift and hence a special destiny for their society. Hints in Messenger retroactively make the earlier books' ambiguous endings happier. . .
Messenger is Matty's story: the little boy who in Gathering Blue is called Matt and has "a dirty face and a mischievous spirit" and boasts that he is "the fiercest of the fierce" and finally brings to Kira both woad and her blind father. At the end of that second book Kira decides to stay in her village to try to improve it, while Matt moves to the blind man's community. Now 14-15, "no longer a boy, but not yet a man," Matty has been living for six years with the blind man, who's called Seer. When people reach a certain age in Village, they receive new names that confirm their roles, and Matty is hoping to some day be called Messenger. He loves carrying messages (telephones being a lost technology), especially when his missions take him through Forest, with which he believes he has a special relationship.
Although Village has been a eutopia where everybody has work and food and homes and everyone welcomes and helps everyone else (especially refugees and people with disabilities), a cancer has been eating Village. Some years ago a tall, dark-haired, accent-voiced stranger called Trade Master started visiting Village to run Trade Mart, where the adult villagers trade away aspects of their personalities for tawdry and transient desires like handsomeness or a sewing machine. And as more people have been trading more of themselves, Village has been losing its harmony. Mentor (the formerly kind and literary schoolteacher) is leading a movement to close Village to outsiders and to build a big wall around it (ala Trump?). Thus Seer's daughter, Kira, may not be able to move there. (One wonders why Seer, who has deep insight into things, and Leader, who sees beyond, haven't noticed the harmful influence of Trade Mart and banned Trade Master--unless their obtuseness is necessary for Lowry's plot.). Not coincidentally, Forest has begun choking people to death with vines, and though Matty feels sure he and Forest are fine, we may worry about him.
For Matty is most likeable! Jonas in The Giver and Kira in Gathering Blue are fine protagonists, but Matty has another level of appeal. His conversations with the wise Seer often take a humorous turn, as when the blind man says that if Kira doesn't come soon, "I'll never see her again," and Matty points out, "You can't see her anyway." When Seer says, "I see with my heart," sensitive Matty regrets his obtuse comment. Although he's often comically frank, Matty also lies now and then (something not done in Village), a remnant of his hard, hustling boyhood in Kira's village. He finds cooking "a bother," despite Seer patiently trying to get him to smell and taste the virtues of chopped and sauteed onions. Matty is tired of reading Moby-Dick and wants a gaming machine like the one his friend Ramon's family traded for at Trade Mart. He loves Seer, Jean (the daughter of Mentor), Frolic (the dog Jean gives him), Kira, and Leader. Matty is a charming and real adolescent boy.
So I don't mind Matty's special gift, healing creatures by laying hands on them, feeling a lightning-like connection, and willing them to be better. He discovered his ability when he held a mutilated frog, felt it die, and healed it back to wholeness and life. His gift terrifies him. Using it is painful and leaves him sick and makes him feel different, and he is unsure what it is, what it means, why it came to him, and what he should do with it. Leader tells Matty, "Don't waste your gift," while Kira refuses to let him heal her crippled leg because it's her.
Unlike in the first two Quartet books, in this one Lowry writes scary violent action (through Forest) and transcendent and romantic fantasy ("in the place called Beyond, Leader's consciousness met Kira's and they curled around each other like wisps of smoke in greeting"). As with the first two books, she is uninterested in explaining the fantastic elements of her story. Who is Trade Master? Where is he from? What is his goal? Where does he get his machines and fur coats? How can he take someone's love of poetry and make them younger? What is the source of the gifts of Jonas (seeing beyond), Kira (seeing ahead), and Matty (healing)? What makes the sentient malevolence of Forest? Is this novel science fiction or fantasy? Actually, it is an allegory, as in Seer's idea that, "Forest is an illusion, a tangled knot of fears and deceits and dark struggles for power." Allegorically, the novel shows that we tend to exchange what is important and makes us happy for what dehumanizes and sickens us. And that "Our gifts are our [non-violent] weaponry." Especially in its sublime, poignant conclusion (no ambiguity this time), Messenger is (so far) the most overtly Christian allegory of the Quartet.
David Morse is the perfect reader for the audiobook; his voice is scratchy, wise, and compassionate. And the ending is accompanied by beautiful, uncanny music just right for the devastating and exhilarating eucatastrophe. If you've read the first two books of the Quartet you should read this one, which links them and looks forward to the fourth. I do hope the last book will answer some of the questions raised by this one.
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7 people found this helpful
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- Gilmara Lima Mendes
- 11-13-12
Oh My Gosh!
Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
I would happily recommend this audio book to a friend. Even though it's the third book of the quartet, they can work separately, and you can understand the characters stories just by reading each book. It's a lovely story, well-paced, full of magic and simple, but engaging.
What other book might you compare Messenger to and why?
I don't have any book to compare it to because it's so different from other books I've read.
Which scene was your favorite?
The scene where he heals it all. It is so unexpected and full of grace.
If you were to make a film of this book, what would be the tag line be?
Healing beyond reason.
Any additional comments?
The only thing that bothered me a little it that I thought the story could be longer.
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7 people found this helpful
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Overall
- KV
- 09-14-04
we'll remember this one forever!
We had listened to The Giver and were thrilled to hear more! This book is actually the 3rd of a series of 3. The 2nd book is called Gathering Blue, which I haven't found on Audible.
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7 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Johanna
- 07-18-04
Lois Lowry is a master storyteller!
This is the second book I've listened to of Lois Lowry's. It's actually a continuation of her book, The Giver, which I've listened to again and again with great pleasure. Lowry's character development is wonderful and her vivid language effortlessly transports me into the world she has created while I work on my artwork. Also, the narrators for both books sound just right, and I'm very particular about narrators!
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6 people found this helpful
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- Tara
- 04-03-13
Brings THE GIVER & GATHERING BLUE together nicely
Lowry does it again in the 3rd book of the Giver Series. Another well told, edge of your seat, emotion evoking story about insurmountable odds in a place where the natural order of things is not like (and not totally unlike) our own. Characters from both The Giver and Gathering Blue are present and more details from both earlier books are filled in (a bit, don't expect all the answers).
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- green ice cream garden
- 01-13-15
Three only for Matty
Of the four Giver books this is the one I least understand. Was this book necessary? It could have been a part 2 to Gathering Blue. It could also have been a prologue to Son. If it weren't because Matty was such a loveable character I would have rated this book a two. The title is misleading, it's not about a Messenger but rather the message. This brief saga, which could have been more emotionally touching, felt forced and rather short of sensitivity by the other characters. Read it if your committed to the series, otherwise pass.
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- Linda B
- 05-16-12
Brainwashing for kids
Trading, a free market, commerce is evil in this book. Self sacrifice is exhaulted. Huh? How is that a good message for children and how is it even true? If you don't accept that political agenda and message (or if you believe the opposite is true) this book will not hit the mark it is supposed to and you may even find it a bit evil itself. This isn't a message I would want my children to read and if they did I would have to follow it up with a sanity restoring except from Atlas Shrugged to save their sense of rational thought and reason. I could not diagree with it more.
Aside from that, it creeps slowly along, and the ending is disappointing. It seems there is way more detail than necessary in such a short book and I found the characters not hallf as compelling as in the Giver. A disappointment.
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- An Old Hippie Chick
- 07-11-15
I'd listen to David Morse read the phone book!
I think I read this story out of sequence and had problems figuring out what was happening until I re-read the Giver and Gathering Blue. Lowry does write interesting, well-thought-out, characters and environments and this is no exception. My original reason for getting it, and why I wound up with it out of sequence was that I saw it was read by David Morse. I've liked his acting, and especially his voice, since the days of the medical show he was on when he first began TV work. I can't remember the show, but I remember him.
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- Victoria
- 08-01-14
Thanks Lois, it was wonderful!
There's a lot going on in this story. Loyalty, love, bewilderment are just a few words that come to mind, along with perseverance and caring. I will say that the ending was not quite what I hoped for in one sense, and yet, it was perfect in another way, but I can't get into that without giving it away. Can't wait to get into the next and final story in the series. The narrator was also perfect for this story!
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