Evan Nelsen
- 6
- opiniones
- 1
- voto útil
- 8
- calificaciones
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Fourth Wing
- Empyrean, Book 1
- De: Rebecca Yarros
- Narrado por: Rebecca Soler, Teddy Hamilton
- Duración: 21 h y 22 m
- Versión completa
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Historia
Twenty-year-old Violet Sorrengail was supposed to enter the Scribe Quadrant, living a quiet life among books and history. Now, the commanding general—also known as her tough-as-talons mother—has ordered Violet to join the hundreds of candidates striving to become the elite of Navarre: dragon riders. But when you’re smaller than everyone else and your body is brittle, death is only a heartbeat away...because dragons don’t bond to “fragile” humans. They incinerate them.
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Erotica with Dragons
- De Trev en 05-13-23
- Fourth Wing
- Empyrean, Book 1
- De: Rebecca Yarros
- Narrado por: Rebecca Soler, Teddy Hamilton
Unoriginal trashy romance novel disguised as a dragonrider fantasy; so terrible, it’s funny.
Revisado: 02-19-24
I fell for popularity. This book was everywhere. To me it looked pretty derivative but I was willing to give the author a chance that maybe she had a neat twist to the standard dragonrider fantasy and that was the reason it was so popular. My initial judgment was correct. The author borrows HEAVILY from Anne McCaffrey and Christopher Paolini to name a few. The first part of it seemed interesting with several mysteries keeping my attention: why are the kingdom’s wards failing? Why do they hide so much information from the riders? Why does an army in need of warm bodies allow capable individuals to die in stupid contests? Why does the society make no sense? Why is the romance so weird? Why do I hate all the characters?
Only a few of these mysteries were satisfactorily answered by the end. And the romance keeps getting weirder. Indeed, this turns into a unabashed trashy romance 2/3 of the way through with me wondering when the actual plot would move forward. The romantic relationship depicted is toxic. There’s no beating around that fact.
Serious note: If you find yourself being attracted to a person who you think has a high chance of murdering you or doing physical violence upon you (like the main character in this novel),
1. Get to a safe place
2. Seek help
If you find yourself being forced into close quarters with this person by unwitting friends/colleagues/horny dragons (like the MC), tell someone about it you trust and get out of there! This is a recipe for eventual domestic violence.
Back to review: the dialogue becomes repetitive and unbearably painful particularly around that 2/3 mark. I would have quit at that point had not the updates about my progress in the book made my wife laugh so hard. The hilarity was not the author’s intention, just emblematic of how terribly written it is.
The plot, when it was progressing, was intriguing. And the aerial combat at the end was well done. This does not make up for the terrible, angsty dialogue and narration, and utterly unoriginal world-building and characters. I’m mostly speaking from my experience with the fantasy genre. Apparently even the trashy romance was unoriginal, with my wife predicting such bizarre plot details like the starting initials of the love interest or the tracing of scars across his back (this sort of thing plus the epic melodrama was the source of our mirth).
There is some evidence the author is cognizant of what garbage she’s produced. “Xadan, you are SUCH a cliché” is a real line in the book. I did get the sense that toward the end of the novel she was trying to see what she could get away with with her tasteless readers.
I thought the criticism of the reader was overblown. Morgan Freeman could read this and it would still be trash. She did a fine job. That being said, randomly switching to a different, male reader, for the last 30 minutes threw me for a loop. That made no sense.
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Human Prehistory and the First Civilizations
- De: Brian M. Fagan, The Great Courses
- Narrado por: Brian M. Fagan
- Duración: 18 h y 10 m
- Grabación Original
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Historia
Where do we come from? How did our ancestors settle this planet? How did the great historic civilizations of the world develop? How does a past so shadowy that it has to be painstakingly reconstructed from fragmentary, largely unwritten records nonetheless make us who and what we are?
These 36 lectures bring you the answers that the latest scientific and archaeological research and theorizing suggest about human origins, how populations developed, and the ways in which civilizations spread throughout the globe.
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Great Conceptually But Becoming Dated
- De JCurtis en 09-25-13
Outdated broad overview of Prehistory and civilizations
Revisado: 03-18-23
I’ve listened to many Great Courses. This one ranks toward the bottom but primarily because this course is in need of an update. Based on the copyright date printed in the accompanying PDF, this was made in 2003.
As a result, it is missing much of the exciting discoveries of the past couple decades, including all the eye-opening and narrative changing results of modern genetics. Having just finished Patrick Wyman’s Tides of History podcast seasons examining prehistory and all the way to the Branze Age collapse (seasons 3-4ish? 2020-2022), I can say that this course is very thin by comparison.
That being said, Fagan does a good job touching on the different parts of the globe and I learned a few interesting facts along the way.
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History's Great Military Blunders and the Lessons They Teach
- De: The Great Courses, Gregory S. Aldrete
- Narrado por: Gregory S. Aldrete
- Duración: 12 h y 12 m
- Grabación Original
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Military history often highlights successes and suggests a sense of inevitability about victory, but there is so much that can be gleaned from considering failures. Study these crucibles of history to gain a better understanding of why a civilization took - or didn't take - a particular path.
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Martial Chaos
- De Cynthia en 08-16-16
No blunders here
Revisado: 07-28-19
This is a sweeping review of military blunders. It starts with an example in the civil war and overview of how military blunders happen. It then goes far into the past. The blunders are chronological from there ending at WWII operation market garden. And finally a review. They are great episodes, meaning they are well told stories that are self contained. Some friends and I listened to several during a car ride and it was very entertaining, picking episodes that sounded interesting at the moment. Professor Aldrete is a great story teller. He expresses the humor of these stories well. I’m definitely buying another course by him. I also realized that I have a book of his on my shelf I haven’t read yet. After being so thoroughly entertained I’m motivated to read it.
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Wishes and Wellingtons
- De: Julie Berry
- Narrado por: Jayne Entwistle
- Duración: 9 h y 29 m
- Versión completa
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Maeve Merritt chafes at the rigid rules at her London boarding school for “Upright Young Ladies.” When punishment forces her to sort through the trash, she finds a sardine tin that houses a foul-tempered djinni with no intention of submitting to a schoolgirl as his master. Soon an orphan boy from the charitable home next door, a mysterious tall man in ginger whiskers, a disgruntled school worker, and a take-no-prisoners business tycoon are in hot pursuit of Maeve and her magical discovery.
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I didn’t want it to end
- De Julia en 10-05-18
- Wishes and Wellingtons
- De: Julie Berry
- Narrado por: Jayne Entwistle
Great character development
Revisado: 04-02-19
I’ve read much more mature books where the characters stay flat as a pancake throughout the story. This story, although written for children, depicts each character well and shows growth in even secondary actors due to the events in the story far better than many of those more mature books. It’s a fun story. You find yourself rooting for the characters and against the villains. The ending is satisfying. What more can you ask in a novel? Oh, yes, a marvelous performance by Jayne Entwistle. She can really bring out uniqueness in each character. Also, she has an adorable accent. This is a rare win for audible original which I find are usually lame.
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Zero G
- De: Dan Wells
- Narrado por: Emily Woo Zeller, Margaret Ying Drake, Josh Hurley, y otros
- Duración: 4 h y 8 m
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Zero is just one of 20,000 people aboard a spaceship bound for a new planet set to be colonized. The journey is over a century long but luckily, everyone is in stasis, so they’ll be safe and sound asleep during the trip. Everyone that is, except for Zero, whose pod has malfunctioned, waking him up a hundred years early. His initial excitement in roaming the ship alone quickly turns to a heart-stopping interstellar adventure when a family of space pirates show up, trying to hijack the ship and take the colonizers hostage.
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Passengers movie with space pirates
- De Kingsley en 12-07-18
- Zero G
- De: Dan Wells
- Narrado por: Emily Woo Zeller, Margaret Ying Drake, Josh Hurley, Eddy Lee, Jennifer Van Dyck, Allyson Johnson, David Shih, Betsy Hogg, Chelsea Spack
An Audible Original well done
Revisado: 01-07-19
This is an original that is well thought out and performed. I have had mixed feelings about previous audible originals. This story was well written and although targeting a younger audience, was entertaining enough for me to enjoy it. Also, it has better science in it than most sci fi I read. The writer did a good job. The actors were well cast and delivered their characters in the way I think the author intended.
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Memories of Ice
- Malazan Book of the Fallen, Book 3
- De: Steven Erikson
- Narrado por: Ralph Lister
- Duración: 43 h y 55 m
- Versión completa
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The ravaged continent of Genabackis has given birth to a terrifying new empire: the Pannion Domin. Like a tide of corrupted blood, it seethes across the land, devouring all. In its path stands an uneasy alliance: Onearm’s army and Whiskeyjack’s Bridgeburners alongside their enemies of old - the forces of the Warlord Caladan Brood, Anomander Rake and his Tiste Andii mages, and the Rhivi people of the plains. But ancient undead clans are also gathering; the T’lan Imass have risen.
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Not A Chef. Not A Rock Star. A World-Class Writer!
- De Michael en 03-29-13
- Memories of Ice
- Malazan Book of the Fallen, Book 3
- De: Steven Erikson
- Narrado por: Ralph Lister
Ok, now I understand...three books in
Revisado: 10-01-17
Steven Erikson really comes in to his own in this book. Where the first one was information overload of a very alien world and felt like stepping into the warren of chaos, the third book in the series weaves a more cohesive and understandable plot with a more conventional narrative structure. One of my criticisms of the previous two books is the excessive amount of climaxes; they leave the reader with little grounding in how epic or meaningful they really are. Memories of Ice builds to a single finale that is phenomenal. While there is tragedy in this book, it is not as heart wrenching (or torturous) as the second and Erikson does a great job providing comic relief throughout. I found myself laughing aloud on multiple occasions.
The character development is top notch with several hundred thousand years of it on some of the characters. There is thoughtful dialogue in this book, as in the second. The characters give meaningful reflections on their experiences (highly quotable stuff here). I want to buy the hard copies of the second and third (I have the first) just to use them as a reference to all the great quotes on their pages. I didn't mind how long it was. There's too much good stuff in it. As my title says, it took a few long books to really understand what happened in the first. This is more a criticism of the first than this one. I'm going to keep on with this series.
Ralph Lister does a fantastic job with the reading. He has a large range of character voices that is needed with such a large cast of characters. It certainly helped with the comprehension of what was happening. One criticism I have of his telling is that he doesn't pause between different parts of the story. I had to rewind often because the transition to talking about events half a world a way was too smooth.
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