Good audiobooks
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Thank you for your suggestions!
As for getting into modern sci-fi, I am sure that will happen sooner or later
Bit off topic, since I didn't listen to the audio version, but the Culture series from Banks is fantastic.
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I have recently got into audiobooks, with a focus on classic sci-fi, I just finnished Rendezvous With Rama by Arthur C. Clark (narrated by Peter Gamin), which is absolutely brilliant, highly recommended, and The Time Machine by H. G. Wells (narrated by Kelsey Grammer, free on Apple Books), also brilliant, very different from the 1960s film.
Anyway do you have any tips on classic sci-fi (1870s-1990s) that I should listen to?
I use Apple Books to buy the books, I am not really interested in audiobook streaming, I want to own my books, not rent access to them.
At the moment I have several books that I need to listen to, but I want to buy more now so I have them in my library.
I have the following books in my library:
- Rendezvous with Rama - Arthur C Clark - Narrated by Peter Gamin
- The Invisible Man - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Alexandra Coles
- The Time Machine - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Kelsey Grammer
- The World Set Free - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Sebastian Blackwood
- I, Robot - Isaac Asimov - Narrated by Scott Brick
- Ignition, An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants - John Drury Clark - Narrated by Jonathan Todd Ross
I am planning on getting 2001: A Space Oddesy and some even more Arthur C. Clark...
wrote last edited by [email protected]Your list of audio books is very similar to how I started. I stumbled across a torrent with a bunch of Hugo winners, and those were included.
Some recommendations off the top of my head:
- Project Hail Mary (Weir).
- Snow Crash. (Stephenson).
- Cryptonomicon (Stephenson. Not sci-fi, but I highly recommend it anyway).
- The End of Eternity (Asimov. His only time travel book).
And of more recent date, the "Dungeon Crawler Carl" series as released by sound booth Theater is pretty much the gold standard in Audio book production. Seems pretty shallow at first, but the sci-fi element becomes more and more prevalent with time, and it weaves a pretty interesting story. On top of being hilarious. I cannot recommend this series enough.
In addition to those, Discworld makes for some great audio books as well.
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I have recently got into audiobooks, with a focus on classic sci-fi, I just finnished Rendezvous With Rama by Arthur C. Clark (narrated by Peter Gamin), which is absolutely brilliant, highly recommended, and The Time Machine by H. G. Wells (narrated by Kelsey Grammer, free on Apple Books), also brilliant, very different from the 1960s film.
Anyway do you have any tips on classic sci-fi (1870s-1990s) that I should listen to?
I use Apple Books to buy the books, I am not really interested in audiobook streaming, I want to own my books, not rent access to them.
At the moment I have several books that I need to listen to, but I want to buy more now so I have them in my library.
I have the following books in my library:
- Rendezvous with Rama - Arthur C Clark - Narrated by Peter Gamin
- The Invisible Man - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Alexandra Coles
- The Time Machine - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Kelsey Grammer
- The World Set Free - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Sebastian Blackwood
- I, Robot - Isaac Asimov - Narrated by Scott Brick
- Ignition, An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants - John Drury Clark - Narrated by Jonathan Todd Ross
I am planning on getting 2001: A Space Oddesy and some even more Arthur C. Clark...
wrote last edited by [email protected]I would highly recommend The Chrysalids by John Wyndham. There's an excellent audio book version available for free on Archive.org.
It's very well written classic sci-fi.
Some others that I thoroughly enjoyed:
- Starwolf - Edmond Hamilton
- The Stainless Steel Rat - Harry Harrison
- The Jameson Satellite - Neil R. Jones
- Gunner Cade - Cyril Kornbluth & Judith Merrill
- The Shockwave Rider - John Brunner
- Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury
- Phaid the Gambler - Mick Ferran
- The Dispossessed - Ursula Le'Guin
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Your list of audio books is very similar to how I started. I stumbled across a torrent with a bunch of Hugo winners, and those were included.
Some recommendations off the top of my head:
- Project Hail Mary (Weir).
- Snow Crash. (Stephenson).
- Cryptonomicon (Stephenson. Not sci-fi, but I highly recommend it anyway).
- The End of Eternity (Asimov. His only time travel book).
And of more recent date, the "Dungeon Crawler Carl" series as released by sound booth Theater is pretty much the gold standard in Audio book production. Seems pretty shallow at first, but the sci-fi element becomes more and more prevalent with time, and it weaves a pretty interesting story. On top of being hilarious. I cannot recommend this series enough.
In addition to those, Discworld makes for some great audio books as well.
I've just recently listened to book 1 of Dungeon Crawler Carl on audible. I'm really not sold on his partner(I won't say more than that). Just a style thing, it's not for me. However I'm enjoying it enough to continue reading more of them. Do you know if there are different audio book versions?
I read He Who Fights With Monsters and have really enjoyed the voice work in that series.
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I've just recently listened to book 1 of Dungeon Crawler Carl on audible. I'm really not sold on his partner(I won't say more than that). Just a style thing, it's not for me. However I'm enjoying it enough to continue reading more of them. Do you know if there are different audio book versions?
I read He Who Fights With Monsters and have really enjoyed the voice work in that series.
I only know of the version I've heard on Audible, and that's the Sound Booth Theater one (autocorrect butchered the studio name in my comment. Fixed)
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I have recently got into audiobooks, with a focus on classic sci-fi, I just finnished Rendezvous With Rama by Arthur C. Clark (narrated by Peter Gamin), which is absolutely brilliant, highly recommended, and The Time Machine by H. G. Wells (narrated by Kelsey Grammer, free on Apple Books), also brilliant, very different from the 1960s film.
Anyway do you have any tips on classic sci-fi (1870s-1990s) that I should listen to?
I use Apple Books to buy the books, I am not really interested in audiobook streaming, I want to own my books, not rent access to them.
At the moment I have several books that I need to listen to, but I want to buy more now so I have them in my library.
I have the following books in my library:
- Rendezvous with Rama - Arthur C Clark - Narrated by Peter Gamin
- The Invisible Man - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Alexandra Coles
- The Time Machine - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Kelsey Grammer
- The World Set Free - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Sebastian Blackwood
- I, Robot - Isaac Asimov - Narrated by Scott Brick
- Ignition, An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants - John Drury Clark - Narrated by Jonathan Todd Ross
I am planning on getting 2001: A Space Oddesy and some even more Arthur C. Clark...
wrote last edited by [email protected]The John Carter books are a good read/listen.
I started with A Princess of Mars
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Also, plenty of SciFi short-story collections on Librivox.org
Or search for Harry Harrison on there.
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For commercial stuff Greg Egan(hard SciFi) is great, and I remember Jeff Noon, Vurt/Pollen were also great.
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Your list of audio books is very similar to how I started. I stumbled across a torrent with a bunch of Hugo winners, and those were included.
Some recommendations off the top of my head:
- Project Hail Mary (Weir).
- Snow Crash. (Stephenson).
- Cryptonomicon (Stephenson. Not sci-fi, but I highly recommend it anyway).
- The End of Eternity (Asimov. His only time travel book).
And of more recent date, the "Dungeon Crawler Carl" series as released by sound booth Theater is pretty much the gold standard in Audio book production. Seems pretty shallow at first, but the sci-fi element becomes more and more prevalent with time, and it weaves a pretty interesting story. On top of being hilarious. I cannot recommend this series enough.
In addition to those, Discworld makes for some great audio books as well.
Project Hail Mary was my first thought when I read āaudiobooksā and āsci-fiā. Not only is there an aspect to the story that lends itself particularly well to the audiobook format, but the narrator (Ray Porter) is so good Iāve sought out other books heās narrated.
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I have recently got into audiobooks, with a focus on classic sci-fi, I just finnished Rendezvous With Rama by Arthur C. Clark (narrated by Peter Gamin), which is absolutely brilliant, highly recommended, and The Time Machine by H. G. Wells (narrated by Kelsey Grammer, free on Apple Books), also brilliant, very different from the 1960s film.
Anyway do you have any tips on classic sci-fi (1870s-1990s) that I should listen to?
I use Apple Books to buy the books, I am not really interested in audiobook streaming, I want to own my books, not rent access to them.
At the moment I have several books that I need to listen to, but I want to buy more now so I have them in my library.
I have the following books in my library:
- Rendezvous with Rama - Arthur C Clark - Narrated by Peter Gamin
- The Invisible Man - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Alexandra Coles
- The Time Machine - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Kelsey Grammer
- The World Set Free - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Sebastian Blackwood
- I, Robot - Isaac Asimov - Narrated by Scott Brick
- Ignition, An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants - John Drury Clark - Narrated by Jonathan Todd Ross
I am planning on getting 2001: A Space Oddesy and some even more Arthur C. Clark...
Friendly reminder that a lot of libraries lend audio books as well.
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I have recently got into audiobooks, with a focus on classic sci-fi, I just finnished Rendezvous With Rama by Arthur C. Clark (narrated by Peter Gamin), which is absolutely brilliant, highly recommended, and The Time Machine by H. G. Wells (narrated by Kelsey Grammer, free on Apple Books), also brilliant, very different from the 1960s film.
Anyway do you have any tips on classic sci-fi (1870s-1990s) that I should listen to?
I use Apple Books to buy the books, I am not really interested in audiobook streaming, I want to own my books, not rent access to them.
At the moment I have several books that I need to listen to, but I want to buy more now so I have them in my library.
I have the following books in my library:
- Rendezvous with Rama - Arthur C Clark - Narrated by Peter Gamin
- The Invisible Man - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Alexandra Coles
- The Time Machine - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Kelsey Grammer
- The World Set Free - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Sebastian Blackwood
- I, Robot - Isaac Asimov - Narrated by Scott Brick
- Ignition, An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants - John Drury Clark - Narrated by Jonathan Todd Ross
I am planning on getting 2001: A Space Oddesy and some even more Arthur C. Clark...
The Moon is a Harsh Mistress - Heinlein
The Mote in God's Eye - Niven / Pournelle
Solaris - Lem
Fire Upon the Deep - Vinge
Flowers for Algernon - Keyes
Diamond Age - Stephenson
Startide Rising - Brin
The Demolished Man - Bester
Have Space Suit - Will travel - Heinlein
Out of the Silent Planet - CS Lewis
Uplift War - Brin
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Friendly reminder that a lot of libraries lend audio books as well.
I wonder if they integrate with carplay....
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I wonder if they integrate with carplay....
Libby does!
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I have recently got into audiobooks, with a focus on classic sci-fi, I just finnished Rendezvous With Rama by Arthur C. Clark (narrated by Peter Gamin), which is absolutely brilliant, highly recommended, and The Time Machine by H. G. Wells (narrated by Kelsey Grammer, free on Apple Books), also brilliant, very different from the 1960s film.
Anyway do you have any tips on classic sci-fi (1870s-1990s) that I should listen to?
I use Apple Books to buy the books, I am not really interested in audiobook streaming, I want to own my books, not rent access to them.
At the moment I have several books that I need to listen to, but I want to buy more now so I have them in my library.
I have the following books in my library:
- Rendezvous with Rama - Arthur C Clark - Narrated by Peter Gamin
- The Invisible Man - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Alexandra Coles
- The Time Machine - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Kelsey Grammer
- The World Set Free - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Sebastian Blackwood
- I, Robot - Isaac Asimov - Narrated by Scott Brick
- Ignition, An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants - John Drury Clark - Narrated by Jonathan Todd Ross
I am planning on getting 2001: A Space Oddesy and some even more Arthur C. Clark...
Speaking of classics, there is a Tim Curry performance of Jules Verne's Journey to the Centre of the Earth.
If you're a fan of Tim Curry (who isn't?), it's an excellent one to listen to.
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I have recently got into audiobooks, with a focus on classic sci-fi, I just finnished Rendezvous With Rama by Arthur C. Clark (narrated by Peter Gamin), which is absolutely brilliant, highly recommended, and The Time Machine by H. G. Wells (narrated by Kelsey Grammer, free on Apple Books), also brilliant, very different from the 1960s film.
Anyway do you have any tips on classic sci-fi (1870s-1990s) that I should listen to?
I use Apple Books to buy the books, I am not really interested in audiobook streaming, I want to own my books, not rent access to them.
At the moment I have several books that I need to listen to, but I want to buy more now so I have them in my library.
I have the following books in my library:
- Rendezvous with Rama - Arthur C Clark - Narrated by Peter Gamin
- The Invisible Man - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Alexandra Coles
- The Time Machine - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Kelsey Grammer
- The World Set Free - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Sebastian Blackwood
- I, Robot - Isaac Asimov - Narrated by Scott Brick
- Ignition, An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants - John Drury Clark - Narrated by Jonathan Todd Ross
I am planning on getting 2001: A Space Oddesy and some even more Arthur C. Clark...
Dungeon Crawler Carl
Hands down the best audio book series I've ever listened to. If you like video games, sci-fi, or fantasy, you will not be disappointed.
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Speaking of classics, there is a Tim Curry performance of Jules Verne's Journey to the Centre of the Earth.
If you're a fan of Tim Curry (who isn't?), it's an excellent one to listen to.
I am a fan of Jules Verne, and Tim Curry is brilliant, this sounds amazing, thanks for the suggestion
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Libby does!
Humm, I am a Swede and it looks like my local library uses Biblio...
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I have recently got into audiobooks, with a focus on classic sci-fi, I just finnished Rendezvous With Rama by Arthur C. Clark (narrated by Peter Gamin), which is absolutely brilliant, highly recommended, and The Time Machine by H. G. Wells (narrated by Kelsey Grammer, free on Apple Books), also brilliant, very different from the 1960s film.
Anyway do you have any tips on classic sci-fi (1870s-1990s) that I should listen to?
I use Apple Books to buy the books, I am not really interested in audiobook streaming, I want to own my books, not rent access to them.
At the moment I have several books that I need to listen to, but I want to buy more now so I have them in my library.
I have the following books in my library:
- Rendezvous with Rama - Arthur C Clark - Narrated by Peter Gamin
- The Invisible Man - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Alexandra Coles
- The Time Machine - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Kelsey Grammer
- The World Set Free - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Sebastian Blackwood
- I, Robot - Isaac Asimov - Narrated by Scott Brick
- Ignition, An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants - John Drury Clark - Narrated by Jonathan Todd Ross
I am planning on getting 2001: A Space Oddesy and some even more Arthur C. Clark...
I love The Player of Games by Iain M. Banks. The audiobook is narrated by Peter Kenny and he does such a good job with it.
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Dungeon Crawler Carl
Hands down the best audio book series I've ever listened to. If you like video games, sci-fi, or fantasy, you will not be disappointed.
It's hilarious, but far from the classic sci-fi OP is looking for.
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I only know of the version I've heard on Audible, and that's the Sound Booth Theater one (autocorrect butchered the studio name in my comment. Fixed)
Ahh okay cool that is the one I just finished
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I have recently got into audiobooks, with a focus on classic sci-fi, I just finnished Rendezvous With Rama by Arthur C. Clark (narrated by Peter Gamin), which is absolutely brilliant, highly recommended, and The Time Machine by H. G. Wells (narrated by Kelsey Grammer, free on Apple Books), also brilliant, very different from the 1960s film.
Anyway do you have any tips on classic sci-fi (1870s-1990s) that I should listen to?
I use Apple Books to buy the books, I am not really interested in audiobook streaming, I want to own my books, not rent access to them.
At the moment I have several books that I need to listen to, but I want to buy more now so I have them in my library.
I have the following books in my library:
- Rendezvous with Rama - Arthur C Clark - Narrated by Peter Gamin
- The Invisible Man - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Alexandra Coles
- The Time Machine - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Kelsey Grammer
- The World Set Free - H. G. Wells - Narrated by Sebastian Blackwood
- I, Robot - Isaac Asimov - Narrated by Scott Brick
- Ignition, An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants - John Drury Clark - Narrated by Jonathan Todd Ross
I am planning on getting 2001: A Space Oddesy and some even more Arthur C. Clark...
I enjoyed War of the Worlds in audiobook form
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I enjoyed War of the Worlds in audiobook form
I have that on my list of future books to get