Voices
Annals of the Western Shore, Book Two
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Narrado por:
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Melanie Martinez
Voices stars the people of Ansul, a town of scholars and traders conquered by the marauding Alds 17 years ago. When poet Orrec arrives in town, however, the people begin to garner the courage to rebel against their overlords.
©2006 Ursula K. Le Guin (P)2006 Recorded Books LLCLos oyentes también disfrutaron:
Reseñas de la Crítica
"Le Guin's superior narrative voice and storytelling power make even small moments ring with truth." (School Library Journal)
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Really do not get the relationship to the young Ald which eventually is just dropped.
Almost all the “action”in this story is off screen, but that makes sense considering who the story teller is.
Not sure why so many complaints about the performer
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I can't take a star off overall because the story is so good, Voices is a 5-star novel classified as YA but as enjoyable for adults as the Earthsea books. I would not want to discourage anyone from listening and enjoying Voices despite the narrator's voice.
Melanie Martinez's performance gets one star, and that's being generous. From the first I was irked by her golly-gee tone of voice, but I stuck with the audiobook because it's a novel I love. I hope others will listen, and enjoy.
This narration of Voices is flat in terms of voices. You'll not be able to tell one character's lines from another's if you don't pay close attention. Despite that flatness, it's not all flat in tone, but maybe it would be better if it were more nearly so. The modulations of Martinez's voice rise and fall in random sing-song, disregarding the meaning of the words.
Nevertheless, every now and then, I would be swept up by the story in spite of the narration. And then, every now and then, a nuance of tone would jerk me back into awareness of the narration, and a very unpleasant awareness it was. For example, Martinez pronounced the word, "raped," like a narrator of Peter Rabbit saying, "cabbages."
I would have let that go, glad just to be able to re-read the story in audio format--if not the best reading, at least a reading. At least the narrator's pronunciation was clear and accurate--almost always. Then she said, "calvary," when she meant "cavalry." I thought I'd misheard and went back to check. Nope, sure enough, she'd said "calvary," but of course it could have been a mistake.
Nope. She didn't know the difference between CALVARY and CAVALRY. She said it wrong again, and again, clearly and distinctly, every time the word was used, until I wished the word had not been used, at all, and "mounted troops," or "legions on horseback," or any other term were written instead. This is not just toe-may-toe vs toe-mah-toe; cavalry and calvary are completely different.
The listener who knows the difference is pulled out of the story once again, made cringingly conscious of the reader and her entirely inappropriate voice. It's an error the producer should have caught and corrected, but it's also an error a professional narrator ought not to have made in the first place, and it calls attention once again to a voice unworthy of Voices.
Rape is not a bunny's tummy ache and violent death is not the loss of brass buttons. There are brief but dark glimpses of violence and tragedy in this story, and there are passages of transcendent joy. The whole of Voices deserves narration by a voice with intelligent emotional range and accurate pronunciation.
Much blame is to be placed on the producer, who ought to have cast a better reader and caught and corrected errors. I hope a future production of Voices will improve on this attempt. And I hope Martinez will get plenty of work reading the complete Beatrix Potter, but never another Le Guin.
Story powerful, narration tolerable.
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egad, my ears hurt
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I really enjoyed Le Guin's Earthsea trilogy, so for those of you looking to compare them, this has a less dark theme and these are more about the people than about the magic - if that matters to you. As I listened to all three books, I found myself thinking, "These are really good books!" as I got into each. And they stayed good right to the ending of each. They really deserve just as much attention as other bestsellers in the field.
Book 3 won the 2008 Nebula Award
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She is one of the best.. Ursula Le Quinn that is.
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