
Carrot Field
Book 1
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
3 meses gratis
Compra ahora por $24.95
No default payment method selected.
We are sorry. We are not allowed to sell this product with the selected payment method
-
Narrado por:
-
Tony Cleary
-
De:
-
Vincent Asaro
A fantasy epic 20 years in the making! Enter a world of courageous animals, uncommon heroes, and epic battles!
The young rabbit Sebastian Perriwinkle is swept off on a quest - along with the enigmatic badger Plotonicus and the mystical fox Brand Redtail to find the legendary human race. Together they unravel the mystery of an ancient war and confront the ultimate darkness, The Lord Ouroboros.
The complete, unabridged audiobook of Carrot Field is narrated by Tony Cleary (BBC) and scored by Brian Arthur. Produced, engineered, and edited by Tony Cleary.
"Rich with the details of an intricately conceived fantasy world...echoes of C.S Lewis and Tolkien... Carrot Field stands apart...Vincent Asaro has spun quite a yarn." - Simon West Bulford, The Beasts of Upton Puddle, Medallion Press
©2015, 2016, 2017 Vincent Asaro (P)2018 Vincent AsaroListeners also enjoyed...




















Excellent fantasy in a very well though-out world
Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.
This being Book 1 makes me happy! I look forward to seeing how this universe expands!
In addition to submitting a general review of my own thoughts on the book itself, I do also want to respond to a one-star review submitted earlier.
Yes, as with Tolkein and Orwell, there are story elements, situations, and political intrigue which are for more advanced readers. Anthropomorphized characters do not always mean that a story is strictly for young children. That being said, I was young when I began reading Animal Farm, but I do not regret having gone into the book expecting one thing and getting quite another.
[SPOILER - although it was originally referenced in the afforementioned one-star review]
The mushroom reference in the book has nothing to do with wistful, irresponsible escapism. In context, it is in reference to a shamanic religious ceremony, and not substance abuse. If older forms of religion predating the Judeo-Christian tradition are shocking to a reader, then the shamanic ceremony in the book will not be in the comfort zone of the more devout members of more modern, post-shamanic religions.
Also, a blanket one-star review over a single story element outside of one's comfort zone does an immense disservice to the voiceover artist.
No more spoilers from me. :) All in all, I myself found the book and performance to be very enjoyable! Have a listen!
Beautifully Written and Narrated
Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.
A Classic Tale of Wonder
Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.
I was shocked. Not a story for Children
Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.
Who is the target audience for this book? Kids won’t relate to the rabbit, he's too old, he already went to college and all. But the story is too simple to appeal to grown ups, so who is this for, really? I don’t get it.
The rabbit is useless, he has no backbone and no special abilities. He can’t fight, he’s clumsy, he has very little knowledge about the world he lives in, everything scares him, yet he is supposed to be some sort of prophesied Chosen One who will take down evil. Why him? The fox is much more interesting: competent, strong, knowledgeable, has psychic powers, has a fiance waiting for him at home, and,the bad guy is after him. Make him the main character instead! Although I didn’t like the nasal and slow voice the narrator gave him for the audible version, it didn’t fit his character at all.
The book repeats itself over and over, the same sequence plays out in every chapter: They are walking alone in the forest and get spooked by eyes in the dark, the eyes turn out to be an ally who has been following them and wants to help them, they go along with the new guy and he offers a feast in their honor and allows them to stay in his castle (they all have castles).They talk for a while, remind the rabbit of how special he is and get sent on their way to do the same thing over again.
Every time new characters are introduced they are cloaked with a hood hiding their faces.
The party never proactively gets new info or new tools, they stumble into them at every point. They encounter zero obstacles during their journey, they never struggle for anything. Everyone they meet is a friend or becomes one right away. They are handed whatever they need to carry on their journey for free, at some point they are given a magic wine that erases the need to eat. How convenient.
Everyone keeps talking about the bad guy as this threatening Evil force that spreads across the land but…the bad guy isn’t doing anything! He’s not attacking anyone, he’s not oppressing the people nor destroying the land or anything. The “good guys” lost a war to him a while ago and now they want revenge, but the so-called Evil guy isn’t doing anything to them. He only starts teasing them from a distance after they set out after him, not before. Not really an epic journey if the epic journey could have been avoided in the first
place, just leave the guy alone chilling in his tower! He’s not bothering anyone.
Then, out of nowhere, in chapter 13 the whole story becomes an allegory for fascism? The village turns into a Big Brother type of dystopian town, we sit around hearing old people talk about taxes and food rations and fascism propaganda, I don’t get it. What was the point of this? Are you telling me the evil guy influenced the government to become a totalitarian regime? You don’t need an evil dark lord for that.
I will say, tho, the narration is nice and I do like the prose and the writing style. I just wish the rabbit had a better reason to do what he does other than he was bored and an old guy told him to.
Carrot field: a hobbit wanna be minus the excite
Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.