OYENTE

Kenneth Powell

  • 46
  • opiniones
  • 25
  • votos útiles
  • 508
  • calificaciones

Just no.

Total
1 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
2 out of 5 stars
Historia
1 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 02-24-25

In finishing the book I raised it from 1 to 2-stars. All I wrote below still holds - if maybe a bit harsh.

More than anything - the book needs trigger warnings for sexual assault/trauma (of grown women & children); obscene amounts of misogyny - husbands treating wives like inferior, uninformed housewives - a level that is not really accurate for the time period (realistic for the 50s-60s ... not realistic for the 90s).

So need not go further in the review other than to say - Stephen King (and others) have covered this very ground in horror (decades ago) in a much more compelling way, with characters whose personalities and decision-making abilities don't make you want to throw the book into a muddy ditch.

I raised the rating to 2-stars only because, had the horribly written female characters been less-so and had the misogyny been toned down (from an 11 to maybe a 4) this wouldn't be a horrible story.


SPOILERS (or just warnings):

I think this is maybe only the second time I've ever 1-starred a book. But ...
Scenes in the 1990s of men treating women like it's the 1970s ... men writing female protagonists and stripping the character of any semblance of self-esteem, dignity, ability to think for herself ...

I don't even know if I want/need to bother going past those points. I finished the book because I do my best not to quit once I'm past a certain point. 2/3 of the way through the book nearly broke me. A woman claims to witness a sexual assault, the victim them commits suicide, and the solution to this? The protagonist's doctor husband gives her a bottle of Prozac (something that's inappropriate now, pretty sure it would have been inappropriate then, while he and his friends demand she and her friends apologize for being 'mean' to their new buddy who's going to make them a ton of money??? The buddy is the one who committed the assault - but all good so long as the little wife doesn't hurt my professional reputation.

Then the novel skips ahead 1996 even though the characters are behaving like it's 1980. As another reviewer stated, What in the Stepford Wives is this BS?? Do some read Stepford Wives like it's nonfiction, or perhaps a how-to on how to make your hubby happy? Do they go back and watch the movie 9 to 5 and think that Dabney Coleman's character was the good guy? Had my mother (or any of her friends) been treated this way by their husbands when I was growing up in the 80s - they would have knocked those men straight into the mid-90s!

This is my first - and I'm very confident it will be my last - Grady Hendrix novel. But he either is writing satire and I'm not in on the joke, or he's truly terrible at writing women protagonists, but thinks he can redeem the entire story in the novel's last few chapters.
In 'As Good As It Gets', a woman asks Jack Nicholson's novelist character how he writes women 'so well' ... and he responds, "I think of a man, and I take away reason and accountability." That's not too far off from how Hendrix wrote drafted his characters here.

And if any part of my review has contained 'spoilers' - they're really not. Consider them trigger warnings, or just warnings in general. (Taking a breath) ... Geesh ... what a horrible novel.

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Fantastic series with the perfect narrator!

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 12-31-24

Love the series - not unlike War and Peace, it’s an investment whose payoff far exceeds the required attention. Have sped through the first four novels in just a couple of months.
The novels are themselves history lessons - detailing events both famous and lesser known. In a Forrest Gump manner, Lanny Budd finds himself a participant/eyewitness to the 20th century’s most crucial events (but with a narrator who possesses all the necessary awareness and ability to describe the moments)! And Bronson Pinchot continues to prove that he’s one of the very best audiobook readers Audible has to offer. In no small part thanks to his narration, I’m sure to complete this massive series.

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Deserves to be better known

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 10-28-24

A brilliant narrator and an equally gifted writer. Cannot wait to listen to more of his works - he is not to be missed.

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Camus at his most brilliant - Ballerini, the best narrator in the business - perfect mix

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 10-18-24

Camus’s philosophy, his narrator’s inner-turmoil, are told to near perfection in his use of second-person POV. The work is short and to the point, and while contemplating a great many of the world’s concerns, does so in an accessible manner other such writer’s lack. (The POV and repetition utilized in such a device benefit the reader/listener greatly).

And simply put, Eduardo Ballerini is perhaps the very best audiobook narrator working today (yes there are others in his league, but he still scores extra points for helping to make ‘War & Peace’ one of my favorite novels). Seek him out - he makes better every novel he reads.

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Fantastic Historical Fiction w/ perfect narration

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 09-01-24

Much in the same way ‘War and Peace’ took readers into the French Revolution (in details not taught in decades), Lanny Budd explores through its fictional lead the ways in which the world did and did not at the conclusion of WWI.
American students are taught that Woodrow Wilson fought for certain peace agreements that never came to pass. Here, Sinclair goes into great detail as to the whys and what-ifs and failures of the French need to punish the Germans at the peace accords. And as it was published just as Europe was coming apart all over again in the late 1930s, it both accurately portrays the moment in time while proving itself correct in its predictions for WWII.
And lastly - this narration proves yet again that Bronson Pinchot (while you’re permitted to adore him for his comedic roles) is one of the best audio book readers on the planet.

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Excellent follow-up to ‘Stamped’

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 08-23-24

While I was moved more strongly in many parts of Stamped from the Beginning, this work is an excellent companion that follows up on where the country has gone since 2016.
It is perhaps a more ‘positive’ overall work than Stamped in that it suggests that progress made can be built upon (even as the right and the conservative USSC tears down old civil rights work). In addition, this is a much more personal tale - letting the reader into the life and experience of the author in all the ways beneficial for letting us know he speaks truth and reality from his own life and is not deterred even when the country can be discouraging.

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Captivating story, exceptional narration

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 06-20-24

Well-written, wonderfully imagined work as his follow-up to ‘Gentleman in Moscow.’ The plot might be a little light on actual activity, but the narrative utilizing ever-alternating points-of-view, is done in a much smoother manner than other books I’ve read of late.
Add to that the narration of Ballerini, Graham and Ireland, and the novel is a wonderful listen.

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Did I love it? Absolutely! Did I understand it? Eh, not so much!

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 06-10-24

Fantastic narration - but with numerous storylines, it might not be best enjoyed on audio book.

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Poignant and sentimental, but wonderful & made fantastic by Streep’s narration

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 05-14-24

Skimming the reviews I read, somewhat to my surprise, that some found the book boring or sluggish, or were even (somehow) displeased with the narration.
The truth is this: if you’re hesitant to buy the book, read the (quite brief) Publisher’s Summary. Everything the book is going to say and do is right there in just a few sentences. Where is says ‘Tom Lake is a meditation,’ it means it!
Though the novel is relatively short, it will not fly by. The story is to be taken in, absorbed, savored. And with Meryl Streep reading the work, there is absolutely no reason to be in a hurry. This is a heart-wrenching book (made all the more so by the fact that some of the most crushing moments arrive with little warning), and Streep’s narration is perfectly suited for the story and its characters. You will be reminded , though no effort need be made on their part, that Streep is probably the greatest actor of her generation, and this performance is as brilliant as any in her career.
The novel is beautifully written, though the reader must be ready for the questions it asks, and accepting of the reality that the work does not attempt to answer any of them. The characters choices and outcomes are there for our contemplation; they acknowledge that they would be helpless to go back and change them, even if they wished to. It is the story of moving past middle age and recalling the most pivotal moments of one’s ‘youth’ (their 20s). It is the telling to one’s children the story of those moments; children who are at that very age now themselves. It is the consideration of what to disclose and what to keep private, even from those who know you more intimately than anyone else ever will. It’s about paths chosen and those not taken. It’s about the joy of life’s experiences and working to believe each day that one can be comfortable appreciating the journey even when you don’t end up where you thought you might.
The work is (again) brilliant (my first Patchett, I will explore her work further); and Streep is Streep (simply perfect).

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Split narrative never comes together -poor audio

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
2 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 05-06-24

This my 2nd Alvarez novel - after discovered her newest 'The Cemetery of Untold Stories' to be brilliant (in both the writing and the audiobook narration).
This is one of Alvarez's earlier works, and I noted in advance that reviews, both here on Audible and on Goodreads, were less than glowing. I was more than willing to contradict that negativity, but sadly I don't think I honestly can.
The novel is one with the (relatively common of late) structure of a 'novel within a novel.' The primary story of a writer's blocked popular novelist is interspersed with that character's 'reading' of a 'true' story of a woman accompanying a long ship's voyage that attempts to combat the smallpox epidemic of the late 1800s. Separately, but stories have moments of strength and perhaps might have worked better as individual novels. The alternating of storylines, at times, gets in the way of either really building the necessary momentum to grip one's attention and compassion for their narrators. Additionally, about half-way through the novel, the tone seems to change. The first half is well-written and very much in the tone of what I experienced from Alvarez'a other work. The rest seemed to lack that polish, as storylines became somewhat rushed, adverbs began running quite wild, and the overall novel suffered for it (particularly the storyline in the present, following the novelist, Alma).
And now for the strange part of listening to this work.
Blanca Camacho has a wonderful voice, does a respectable job separating the characters for the listener's ears, and is 1000% credible in her diction and pronunciation of both English and Spanish. What is extremely problematic, however, is something that perhaps is more the fault of the production that it is that of the narrator. From the very beginning, sounds from Camacho's mouth/throat are easily heard. It is not unlike the unpleasant experience of listening to someone eat with their mouth open. Her every swallow, licking of lips, etc., is clear and distasteful to the ear. Even more unusual, as I"ve listened to over 400 books on audible, was hearing the reader take a drink of water in the middle of reading.

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