346 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
346 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4511
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Title: HPR4511: Audio-books
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4511/hpr4511.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-11-22 15:15:02
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4,511 from Monday the 17th of November 2025.
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Today's show is entitled Audio Books.
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It is hosted by Lee and is about 30 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is Lee walks through his audiobook library.
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Hello I'm Lee.
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Today I'm going to walk through the books in my audiobook library.
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I don't have an audible subscription at the present time.
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I have had one for some years though.
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I first started an audible subscription in about 2014.
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On this PC I'm using OpenAudible to access the books.
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I've also backed up the majority of my purchases, ZVET MP3 or .M4B files.
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Typically I'd actually listen to them via Bluetooth headset, pad to my iPad.
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I have in the past and I did three audio books from Project Gutenberg.
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At one time I got four DVD ROMs worth of supposedly free audio books posted to me
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from an online marketplace.
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Doing this seemed a little shady.
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However it turns out I've never listened at length to any of these two aforementioned sources.
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As you'll hear my favourite genre is sci-fi, then my taste evolved over the years.
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Also like some genres of non-fiction.
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My first ever audible purchase was Excession, Culture Series,
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Book 5, Buy in and Banks, Read by Peter Kenny, 16 hours long.
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The story was set in the far future mainly about sentient starships.
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There were also some human characters, an interesting part of the plot was
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people could through genetic re-engineering reassign their
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agenda within a short space of time.
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Right now I don't exactly remember how the plot transpired,
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but I did find the author's work worth listening to.
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Next was The Martian by Andy Weir, rated by RC Bray.
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I've seen an interview with the author on one of the
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this week in tech video podcasts and the then upcoming movie had probably prompted this.
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It's a story about an astronaut left for dead, the only inhabitant of an entire planet.
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At the time I listened to this I was moving out from my parents' house into a flat
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and did not have a TV or good internet so I was quite absorbed by this book
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and the theme of isolation was quite apt.
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My next book was Alien, Out of the Shadows, written by Tim Levin,
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Dirt Mags, and narrated by a host of readers, including the famous Rutger Hauer,
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who takes on the voice of the android famously played by In Home
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in the original film Alien.
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I chose this due to my obsession with these series of films
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that had at one point seen me studying the Open University course called
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Gender Technology in Representation, simply because these films were on the syllabus.
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My full 4J book was another sci-fi offering, this time an anthology from multiple authors called
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The Best Science Fiction of the Year, Volume 1. It had a whole bunch of different stories,
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most of which I found engaging. My next book, which in fact turned into a whole series of books,
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I got from a recommendation by Steve Gibson on his security now podcast.
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For some years I'd found myself unwittingly involved in cyber security,
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as I had to get a web server to pass credit card compliance scans every three months.
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I've been watching the other podcasts on the Twitch network.
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After watching security now a few times, I got quite obsessed by the topic,
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to the extent I later studied it at postgraduate level.
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The series of books recommended were Rick Brown's Frontier Saga,
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the first one being Aurora CV-01, narrated by Jeff Caffer.
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I won't list all the books in the series, they are about interstellar war,
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though with humans only, no aliens. That's as far as I've got through them at least.
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Including the one just mentioned, my next 10 audio books were from this series,
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each book is about 5 hours long. I'd sometimes be listening
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while playing computer games solo, like Call of Duty, Modern Warfare,
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since these two activities sometimes could complement each other.
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Possibly because I reached a natural pause in the storyline,
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next I broke away and went for something totally different.
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This was a translation of Ancient literature from the Far East, called The Journey West.
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I knew of this tale from a TV adaptation I'd watched as a child called Monkey,
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and the writer of the audio book was one of my favourite childhood presenters,
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also an accomplished comedian, called Kenneth Williams.
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The next book was another one by Andy Weir.
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This was set on a city on the moon and was called Artemis,
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read by Rosario Dawson. I don't remember the plot too well,
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the cool parts I like, similar to with the Martian,
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were characters navigating the realities of living daily life in this
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potentially hazardous environment. That sort of thing has often been a staple of sci-fi.
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I remember even from Alpha C Clark's books, like A Fall of Moon Dust.
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At that point I think someone had suggested some Japanese literature to me,
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and I ended up being interested in a book called Colorless,
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Sukuru Tazaki, and his use of Pilgrimage by Haruki Murakami,
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read by Michael Fenton Stevens. This is a realistic book
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about man's life, dissociation from the friends he knew during his coming of age,
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and reconnection with his past. The next book I will not mention, the author,
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since he has since fallen to distribute, but it was about myths from Norse mythology.
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The next book was stories from Celtic mythology,
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classic stories of the Celtic gods goddesses, heroes and monsters,
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classical mythology series book two by Scott Lewis,
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and read by Oliver Hunt. I studied some of these poems about
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its use by pronunciation, Kahulhan, in high school. At this point I revisited a series of books I'd
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read in print decades previously. The next books were June, June Messiah,
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and Children of June by Frank Herbert, with various narrators. It's a sci-fi inverse of the far
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future, interspersed with mystic elements, and the idea of engineering religions. Then I
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listened to a book telling the true story of the authors, C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien.
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The book is called Band of Snatch by Diana Pavlat Glyar, and was read by Michael Ward.
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It was fascinating to hear about the collaboration between these and other authors,
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in a writer's club at the pub in Oxford in England. The fighters by C.J. Schivers,
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read by Scott Brick, was another non-fiction book. It was about people in the military,
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particularly those fighting overseas in the Middle East. It was interesting for anyone who'd
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been following international events following on from 2001, to see the conflicts from a
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not often misrepresented or untold perspective. The next book was Masters of Doom by David Kushner,
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and narrated by Will Wheaton of Star Trek fame. It again is non-fiction, about the programmers
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who created the eponymous 3D First Person Shooter. I have to say I love this kind of non-fiction.
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Finally I returned to fiction with another recommendation from Security Now Steve Gibson.
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This was salvation by Peter of Hamilton, read by John Lee, and it had my attention, but
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fell a little flat on me, if I recall. But my next book was another sci-fi book. This was
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from the expand series by James S.A. Corrie. I was an avid viewer of the TV series and had got
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impatient waiting for the next season to come out to see what happened next. The book was called
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Subbola Burn, narrated by Jefferson Mace. Then it returned again to non-fiction,
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this time with a journalistic style of book. A series of different stories put together called
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the John Ronson Mysteries, read by the author himself. This tells his true life interactions with
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well or lesser-known people in somewhat offbeat scenarios that all seem to tell us interesting
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things about the culture we live in. My next purchase was linked to my studies. The short title
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is simply Data Science, the full title being too expansive to repeat. It was by Herbert James
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and read by Sam Slydle. Then came another non-fiction by Adam Naiman, read by Rob Shapiro about the
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director's known collectively as The Cone Brothers. The book's catalogue each of their films to date
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at the time it was written. It was only reading this that I realised I'd fallen hookline and sinker
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for the statement in the intro to the movie Fargo that it was based directly on actual events
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with only the names changed. This book was followed by another of the expand series called Nemesis
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Games from the author and narrator mentioned previously. At this point in time I was trying
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moving out from my parents again and had gone into temporary accommodation. My key work
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helped me navigate this process. It was very much into philosophical and psychology books.
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And I believe he recommended my next book. This was The Ten Types of Human by Dexter Dias
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and the audio book was narrated by Tom Klake. It was 26 hours long so I got my money's worth.
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Now back to sci-fi and this was another book with the author interviewed on one of the shows of
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the This Week in Tech Network. It was called Delta V by Daniel Suarez and read by Jeff Gerner.
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I quite like this for perhaps not too distant future telling of potential working
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on the calamity and the beginnings of the era of asteroid mining. It had both elements of adventure
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and suspense as well as sci-fi and survival. A little similar to the Martian. I then continued with
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another book in the June series called God Emperor of June. This was read by Simon Vance. The next
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book was in my favourite genre of true life tech work called Dreaming in Code by Scott Rosenberg
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read by Carl McCarley. I don't remember the exact contents as it blends in my mind with other
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similar books. This was followed in a similar vein by Ghost in the Wires by Kevin Mittnik
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and William L. Simon read by Ray Porter. It was a realistic first-hand portrayal of being an
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actual hacker whose obsession with this special interest brought him into serious trouble with the
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law in the early days of hacking as we know it. Then I seem to take another recommendation
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from Steve Gibson and listen to Gibraltar Earth and Gibraltar Sun by Michael McCollum.
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This was about discovery of imminent danger from the stars and the proactive attempt to save
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humanity from being enslaved by an alien empire. I ended up rather skimming the second book,
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but I remember the first book in the series had a really good twist at the end, which out of
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character for me I'll try not to spoil by revealing it. If my nature is correct, I have here Ramon
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a campo down as the writer of the second book at least. Now I seem to be struggling for inspiration
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and took a leap into Shakespeare, listening to another adaptation of the Tragedy of King Rich in
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the Second. Perhaps I was still also trying to figure out why I failed my high school English literature
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exam back in the day, since this was only of the text I studied back then that at the time I just
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didn't get what it was about or what the point of it was. My next book was recommended to me by a new
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friend I'd made called Beno. It was by the comedian Ben Elton and was called Blind Faith
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narrated by Michael Maloney. It tells an o'wellian story of a future where social media does not
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just dominate life, but is central to everyday existence. In this future, science is demonised
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as heresy and things like inoculations to childhood illnesses are only accessible on the black
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market and obtaining one force's parents to risk severe punishment by the state. I think my
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key worker had recommended the next book which was called Talking to Strangers, what we should know
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about the people we don't know by Malcolm Gladwell. It takes a studied look at human nature and how
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humans have adapted to the modern age. Another fiction book I then listened to was The Hidden Life
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of Trees by Peter Moirleben and read by Mike Grady. It is quite in depth and I remember touches on
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theories that would be not out of place in a James Cameron film or Orson Scott Card novel.
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With Trees in an ecosystem being able to communicate with each other in some restricted sense.
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My next book was actually a physical book I found on the bookshelf at a day centre where there
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was an employment service. It was called Orcs and irrespective of the content, they had me at the
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title given my love of games like Walkraft 2, role-playing settings such as Warhammer 40,000
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and Tolkienist worlds in general. I ended up getting the audio book finding it easier to take in
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than reading the book. Although even in this form I ended up skimming or sleeping through much of
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it. This book was written by Stan Nichols and read by John Lee. Another book recommended by
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my key work was Behave by Robert M. Sapolsky and Read by Michael Goldstrom. It is again about
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the science of psychology, the human mind and modern culture. Strangely now I find my next book
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from Office E. Clarke was called City and the Stars, Read by Mike Grady but I have little recollection
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of it at all. Now I went back to historical fiction prompted perhaps by the occurrence of me
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moving into a new flat that was adjacent to a far eastern mini supermarket. The book was called
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The Forbidden City by Charles River, read by Colin Fluxman. It was quite short just an hour or so.
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I'm not sure if this predated the adaptation from Apple TV but I really listened to a book I'd
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read decades previously called Foundation by Isaac Asimov and rated by William Hope. It was only
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on this listening that I realised how dated it was, for example with every significant character
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being male. And on that I do not excuse myself from the fact that every single book I'm
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mentioning today perhaps with one or two exceptions has had an apparently male author. I next listened
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to Children of the Mind by Olsen Scott Card, read by Gabriel D'Aquir and John Rubin Stein. This
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continues the series that began with Ender's Game, a book I'd read actually before the film
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coming out. Another exploratory for eight into ancient cultures took the form of listening to
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the Epic of the Persian Kings with a notable introduction from Francis Ford Coppola. I have to say
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I remember very little of this and may not have listened to all 12 hours. The next book I'll
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meet due to the current disrepute of the author, as mentioned previously, but was a sci-fi fantasy
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bridging time space heaven and hell. The key narrator James McAvoy portrays the protagonist
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very well. Next was a nonfiction book about the true story of a female hacker called the
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cuckoo's egg written by Cliffsk doll and read by Will Damron. I forget exactly how I ended up
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listening to the next book, but it was called We The Living by Anne Rand, read by Mary Woods.
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It was a story set in Russia many decades ago and I did not get the point completely, had read
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some literary criticism about it. And it seems to be about whether serving the self isn't
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intrinsically valuable goal, especially when the culture you might be in is ostensibly all about
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serving society. I gathered this book may have been politicised to the extent it may be hard
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to appreciate this work of fiction on its own merits nowadays. The clock mirage was a book I listened
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to by Joseph Mazer, read by Keith Salon Wright, unsurprisingly about different concepts of time.
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As an experimenter in creating software for my friend Beno who devised his own time system,
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this was something that at least peaked my interest. The next book was instantalled to my studies
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at the time called The Psychology of Information Security by Leran Zinnatoulin, read by Peter
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Silva Leif. It was only two hours or so long. The next book I read after that I did not remember
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clearly. It was called On Psychology Illustration in Psychopathology written and read by Jay Z Murdoch
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and I must have come to it from my interest in mental health, but did not listen to it
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since. Then I was back to historical nonfiction with a book called GCHQ Centenary Edition
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by Richard Aldrich, read by Peter Noble. This may have come about through my interest in
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cybersecurity and modern technological espionage, wanting to look back at this fascinating
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institution with a remit that now includes protecting UK citizens from cyber threats. I've now
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circled back to almost my first author Andy Ware with the novel Project Hell Mary. This I
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found thoroughly enjoyable, even in so much as it puts the current threats to the world in perspective
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with the idea that something might come entirely off left field, trumping all of those things.
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If you don't want spoilers in my brief explanation of the plot and I suggest skipping ahead a few
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seconds. Basically, a scientist discovers an unlikely form of microbial life that exists in space
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and threatens the output of the Sun. This essentially leads him to going on a one-way trip into the
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foyer to ask aliens how they survived the same catastrophe. I love this book, even with a joking
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reference at the very end to an earlier book. Back to tech, nonfiction, I then listened to Sid Mayer's
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memoir, a life in computer games by himself, and Jennifer Lee Noonan, read by Charles Constant.
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If you like old computer games like SimCity, this is more worth the read or listen. The next book
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was a textbook related to my studies at the time. This was Dockery in Action by Jeff Nicholoth,
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read by Aidan Humphreys, and listened to a couple of books by Neil Stevenson, the first novel
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cryptonomicon, read by William Duffrey. Weaves between World War II, espionage, and near- and modern
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date computer hackery. The second book, Anatham, read by Oliver Wyman and others, was about the
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inhabitants of a scientific monastery in a world not to unlike a future version of our planet,
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discovering a spate scrapped from a parallel universe. Between these two novels, I've missed out
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a religious fictional novel called The Testament of Mary by Colm Toibin. This retails some of the
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story at the centre of Christianity from a different perspective, with a somewhat light touch,
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suggesting events rather than being thoroughly explicit. The next true life story is about a
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modern day outside by all accounts, called The Stranger in the Woods by Michael Finkel,
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read by John Johnson. This is about someone who leaves society and goes to live in complete
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isolation for decades in the woods, barely surviving, sometimes having to steal to survive,
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hence his eventual prosecution, which we're told about from the beginning. With more and more
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details about different aspects of this life, being filled in from chapters to chapter. Next,
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I discovered what a sum of my favourite books. Those Warhammer 40,000 Far Dark Future books by
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Dan Abner. These are quite gritty with lots of action and tech we would consider futuristic now,
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but in the far future is considered to be ancient. The lore to recreate it haven't been lost.
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He has a cast of characters not out of place in the real role-playing adventure,
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heroes who are quite often antiheroes, given they work for a somewhat literally xenophobic
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empire of humanity, where aliens are seen as a threat. There are a good smattering of monsters
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from the realm of chaos, which one might well call demons. The first series of these books
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centers around an imperial inquisitor called Eisenhorn. The second series is about the adventures
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of another inquisitor called Ravenna. The latter is a unique hero being completely paralysed
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due to events happening in the first series, but he has very strong psychic abilities which make him
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formidable at his job of dealing with threats to the empire. Morality is often in question,
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with the heroes sometimes at odds with the authorities who put them in their position. I won't
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list all these books as there are quite a few, though each one is quite substantial, more than
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just an episode, more a complete story in its own right, though the characters and stories from
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novel to novel are generally linked. The next book is Have Space Suitable Travel by Robert A.
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Highline, read by Martin Jurenski, which is a lighthearted adventure about a high school kids
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pursuit of adventure and getting more than he bargained for. Then was another book by the aforen
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not mentioned cancelled author. This had notable narration from as well as James McAlphoy,
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also Brian Cox, the actor not the physicist, John Liff Goe and Bill Nye. The next book was
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Claren the Sun by Katsuo Ishiguru, read by Sura Siu, about a terminally old girl who buys a robot.
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The story is told from the robot's perspective. Ishiguru is probably most famous for the novel
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remains of the day. My favourite Japanese literature led me to Sun and Steel by Yukiya Mishima,
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read by Matthew Taylor. This outlines an interesting perspective on the world and the events of
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the mid 20th century, if nothing else. Then I think the next book may have been another Steve
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Gibson recommendation, called The Silver Ships by S. H. Dukea, read by Grover Gardner,
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and I am somewhat ashamed to say I recall very little of it at all. My previously mentioned
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interest in history and literature led me to a book called The Globe, Life in Shakespeare's London
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by Catherine Arnold, read by Claire Stanford. This talks about some of the realities of that time
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period, the context of the plays and the Bard's career. Then I listened to another Katsuo Ishiguru
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novel called The Berry Giant, read by David Horowitz. This is set in a semi-fantastical time in
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England, when the Saxons were mixing with the native inhabitants. It tells the later lives of some
|
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characters from King Arthur, but is framed as a love story between a now elderly couple
|
||
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|
as they seek eternity together. The next book then is a book in the realm of writing the
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||
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author Chuck Pahal New York, describes his transgressional fiction. It is highly historical,
|
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|
and on the face of it describes the adventures of an adolescent girl,
|
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|
finding herself passed away and in hell. The next book, Fallen Dragon, was a book by Peter
|
||
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|
F. Hamilton, read by John Lee. This was definitely a Steve Gibson recommendation. It's quite an
|
||
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explicit book and tells the lives of people in the future dealing with political issues,
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and the life of a man who joins the military then inadvertently comes across highly
|
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|
advanced technology from another civilization. It's a complex narrative spanning many years.
|
||
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|
Finally enough, at this point, I must have decided to continue with the Rick Brown Frontier Saga,
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||
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|
though as the books are so numerous, I'm not detailing each one. After watching a film,
|
||
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|
I was recommended to read the non-fiction novel on which it was somewhat loosely based.
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||
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|
This was The Revenant by Michael Punki, and the audio book was read by Jeff Harding. This
|
||
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|
brings me to a novel that was recommended to me at a support group I was attending,
|
||
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|
that it had ostensibly nothing to do with the reason we were there. This was tightest grain,
|
||
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|
the first of the gormon-gast novels by Mervyn Peak. It is long an epic in nature,
|
||
|
|
setting a sort of medieval world for apparently European characters. Then I'll listen to some of
|
||
|
|
the works of Edgar Allan Poe, read by Jonathan Kebel, and Peter Noble. Mainly these are short
|
||
|
|
stories, also poems. The stories are all quite atmospheric and are imaginative, while also
|
||
|
|
setting their historical context that was contemporary when they were written. The next novel I
|
||
|
|
listen to, not forever, but for now. Again, in the realm of transgression or fiction by Chuck
|
||
|
|
Pahal Nguogh, is the strangest of love stories, and covers some quite out there topics that can
|
||
|
|
certainly be considered obscene. It's both tongue in cheek and satirical, probably not to many
|
||
|
|
people's tastes unless you get where the author is coming from. It is very well read by Raphael
|
||
|
|
Corkhill, though. I then listen to the sequel to tightest grain, called gormon-gast, read by
|
||
|
|
the same narrator as the previous book in the series. The prince, who was an infant in the first
|
||
|
|
novel, knows growing up. We see the character Steerpite, one of the key protagonists of tightest
|
||
|
|
grain, become the antagonist. This is something I did not see coming, for the hero to become an
|
||
|
|
all-out villain. Then, a book called British Woodland, is a nonfiction book for one of my favorite
|
||
|
|
TV presenters, Ray Mears, who also narrates it. It goes beyond talking about trees and delves into
|
||
|
|
how people all over the world lived in ancient times, using the reverses at hand. A canticle for
|
||
|
|
Lieberwitz by Walter M. Miller, Jr., read by Tom Wiener, is another famous literary novel,
|
||
|
|
I not encountered, but possibly came to me algorithmically. I did not get into it too deeply.
|
||
|
|
It carefully makes real for the reader, a long-term future encompassing repeated cycles of scientific
|
||
|
|
progress, leading each time to nuclear war. That, to be honest, seems a bit dated as future is
|
||
|
|
devised in the past often do. The narrative sometimes makes heavy reference to religious symbolism.
|
||
|
|
Moving the web is a book by Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the worldwide web,
|
||
|
|
who also narrates the audio book. It's quite interesting to think about the way the web
|
||
|
|
was destined to go because of technology and culture and economics, but also interesting to wonder
|
||
|
|
if the original vision could be recaptured now much later in the game. The plum in the golden
|
||
|
|
vase is a translation by David Todd Roy of a quite risque set of tales that follows some characters
|
||
|
|
in medieval China. It is read by George Batman. I not realised how explicit it was going to be when
|
||
|
|
I started listening, and this goes beyond what you might read in Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales
|
||
|
|
even. It has an episodic or my so-pop quality, and the authorship is unknown. Stranger in a strange
|
||
|
|
land is a book by Robert A. Heindland, read by Martin McDougall. It follows a man brought up by aliens
|
||
|
|
with special powers as he returns to earth and has to gun the run ending up staying with an old man
|
||
|
|
who runs a kind of commune, providing him sanctuary. A quasi-religion in shoes,
|
||
|
|
though set in the future the context centers on sexual political and religious issues
|
||
|
|
that were prevalent in the 50s and 60s America, like some works of fiction that may have been
|
||
|
|
forward thinking at the time they were written, this might now suffer from being dated.
|
||
|
|
My next book I listened to was Freakonomics by Stephen D. Levy and Stephen J. Dubner,
|
||
|
|
narrated by the latter. This is a set of journalistic essays that tell some stories about
|
||
|
|
social phenomena, especially in the west over the course of the last century and more recent
|
||
|
|
decades, all through the lens of statistics, human behaviour and money. The pragmatic programmer
|
||
|
|
by David Thomas and Andrew Hunt, read by Anna Katarina, is a guide for anyone doing serious
|
||
|
|
software development of any kind. I like the style and what it has to say, at risk of putting
|
||
|
|
myself into trouble with the person who has agreed to offer feedback to my script for this episode,
|
||
|
|
I admit I struggled a bit with the tone and female American accent of the narrator.
|
||
|
|
Nearly at the end, since I put my subscription to Audubon indefinitely at hold recently,
|
||
|
|
not for any other reason, but for a while my brain was processing a lot and I was getting
|
||
|
|
diminishing returns from listening to new material. I listened to I'm starting to worry about
|
||
|
|
this black box of doom by Jason Pargin, narrated by Ari Fliakos. He has a central character
|
||
|
|
who is certainly depicted as being neurodivergent and suffering with anxiety. This was not such a long
|
||
|
|
book, but I could not make it my way to the end. I normally like satire, but this was not hitting
|
||
|
|
the spot for me. It was well written, but was leaving me quite depressed about the things it was
|
||
|
|
referencing, rather than getting that it was a setup that would later have a payoff. The next book
|
||
|
|
I must have bought to use up my final credits but not listened to. I think it was after visiting
|
||
|
|
the Imperial War Museum in London that I saw this and saw positive reviews. I've probably been
|
||
|
|
searching for something related to the First World War. It's called Birdsong by Sebastian Fulkes
|
||
|
|
by Harry Lloyd and Pippa Bennett Warner. The penultimate book I listened to was The Loosen
|
||
|
|
Defense by Vladimir Nabokov, read by Mel Foster. This was recommended to me by friend who's
|
||
|
|
an avid chess player and also into this author's work. The final book is The Three Body Problem
|
||
|
|
and I was listening to some of this while I was on holiday in Netherlands recently. The authors and
|
||
|
|
narrator have names I won't try to pronounce correctly, but the title is unique and easy to look
|
||
|
|
up. It was made into a TV series though I've not watched it. It is set at different time periods
|
||
|
|
and the main premise is normal laws of physics are all screwed up and characters experience things
|
||
|
|
as a chess basically that someone is playing with their reality. I won't try to talk head
|
||
|
|
about what I've not got to yet, but suffice to say, Earth is in danger and there's a lot the
|
||
|
|
characters have to uncover before they can even start addressing the problem. This brings me to the
|
||
|
|
end of my list. I found this interesting myself uncovering what got me to listen to different
|
||
|
|
audio books, whether it was some algorithm or instance in my life or just random chance.
|
||
|
|
I hope you might have found some of this interesting, even sparking and interesting books you'd
|
||
|
|
like to read or listen to yourself. Anyway that's all for now, thanks for listening.
|
||
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work. Today's show
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was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hosting for HBR has been
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kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and our syncs.net. On this
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otherwise status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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