TMBrown327
New Member
There are massive collections of free audiobooks (those out of copyright) out on the web. There are also many sources for copyrighted material, just depends on how strong your moral compass is I guess.
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I wish I could find The CBS Radio Mystery Theatre. A local radio station aired the program on Sunday nights when I was a teen. Scared the bejeebers out of me, some of those stories did. Great stuff.I have about 130 Gio of audio books on my hard drive which is something like 900 books.
Some poeple people i share books with have up 4 or 5 Tio on there drives, lots of teaching company stuff, most classics,BBC, old time radio,.... amazing choices.
Personally, I have to like the voices I'm hearing while trying to get into the book. After reading the Twighlight Series, I decided to also listen to them. I enjoyed the person they chose for the voice, and therefore really enjoyed my time spent with the audio version.
I remember the tapes days. I was a member of Books On Tape, rentals. Carrying around a box or two of 40 tapes, lol. Still have some kicking around somewhere I bet. I got a waterproof walkman so I could take it on the boat. MP3s are much better.
I must just be lucky when it comes to the readers. I've only found one that I just couldn't stand. All the rest have been good to great, and there have been hundreds. I particularly like Jim Dale, the Harry Potter (US version) guy, and whoever it was that read most of the Stephen King Dark Tower series.
There is no harm in doing so. I also have the habit when I am bored of my daily scheduled work.
I was just curious if there was a general change in attitude about this since 2005.
I don't think I could get into it as well with a nano. Most of the books I listen to are multi-part mp3 files and I'd be forever searching around for the right tracks and bookmarks etc. Without a display, I'd be lost.
I used to have a prejudice against audio books. I still prefer reading books but I since I got my iPhone I find I enjoy audio books as well. They allow me to enjoy books while my eyes or hands are busy with other things.
The only issue is finding affordable (free) audiobooks.
There are massive collections of free audiobooks (those out of copyright)
I think Audiobooks are a mixed bag. I have listened to some AMAZING audio books as well as some AMAZINGLY BAD audio books. The good ones I thoroughly enjoy, but it's hard to tell without giving them a chance first. And great books can be made into terrible audio books. I like to listen to audios when I go running or work out. I find I get less distracted when I do so. I also travel a fair bit and love listening to audio then, too. It definitely helps if they are good. I've recently been devouring Harry Potter on audio as read by Jim Dale. This is the most amazing audio I have ever listened to. It has been some time since I read the series and listening to his story telling is like reading them for the first time all over again. It's incredible.