Tyler Hagan
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We Stand Alone
- A Vietnam War Novel
- De: David Lee Corley
- Narrado por: Virtual Voice
- Duración: 9 h y 22 m
- Versión completa
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Historia
“A historical novel that reads like a modern political thriller, full of exciting action, larger-than-life characters, and unforgettable events.” — Kirkus Reviews A Daring Plan. A Deadly Trap. The Siege at Dien Bien Phu. Hanoi 1953. An American fighter pilot, Tom Coyle, volunteers to fly for the French military during the Indochina War. “Just cargo and troops, no combat” that is the deal. Make some money and head back to the states before he and his friend, Earthquake McGoon, get their asses shot off. But things rarely go as planned… French commander Major Marcel Bigeard is the ...
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Terrible AI Performance
- De Tyler Hagan en 06-06-24
- We Stand Alone
- A Vietnam War Novel
- De: David Lee Corley
- Narrado por: Virtual Voice
Terrible AI Performance
Revisado: 06-06-24
I have no idea if the story is any good because the terrible AI reading made it unbearable to listen to, skip this title.
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Deception Point: A Novel
- De: Dan Brown
- Narrado por: Richard Poe
- Duración: 17 h y 4 m
- Versión completa
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Historia
When a NASA satellite discovers an astonishingly rare object buried deep in the Arctic ice, the floundering space agency proclaims a much-needed victory, a victory with profound implications for NASA policy and the impending presidential election. To verify the authenticity of the find, the White House calls upon the skills of intelligence analyst Rachel Sexton. Accompanied by a team of experts, including the charismatic scholar Michael Tolland, Rachel travels to the Arctic and uncovers the unthinkable.
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Good story, great narrator, bad recording
- De Eric Varsanyi en 07-22-05
- Deception Point: A Novel
- De: Dan Brown
- Narrado por: Richard Poe
Horrible Narrator chock full of errors
Revisado: 11-15-22
The story was ok, it definitely kept you guessing so that’s good, I guess. What I’ve come to expect from Dan Brown is intrigue (this story was missing it), high levels of research making for accurate supporting tidbits to the story (this story didn’t have it and in fact it was full of errors), and a tale that keeps me riveted (I struggled to finish this story it was so terrible.
Now we go onto the most offensive part of this audio book: the narration. I listen to a lot of audio books and there are two approaches to the narration that work well: no character voices or distinct character voices. This narrator tried to use distinct voices for each character but he has two voices in his repertoire: male character and gruff female character. The narration was also full of mispronounced words, emphasis on the wrong syllables of words, and lots of lip smacking and other disgusting sounds I don’t want to hear on an audio book. Tip to the sound engineers, use a gate with this guy.
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Leap
- De: Michael C. Grumley
- Narrado por: Meghan Wolf
- Duración: 13 h y 57 m
- Versión completa
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Historia
With sweating hands, Alison Shaw stared nervously into the giant seawater tank. One year ago, she and her team of marine biologists had stunned the world with an incredible breakthrough. Now they were about to do it again. And this time, they were ready. But an ocean away, something strange was unfolding. Along a lonely coast in South America, an experimental Russian submarine - long thought to have been dismantled - has suddenly resurfaced. And the US Navy has taken notice, sending John Clay and Steve Caesare to investigate.
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Utterly fascinating contemporary science fiction!
- De Wayne en 06-11-16
- Leap
- De: Michael C. Grumley
- Narrado por: Meghan Wolf
Good story, bad narration, random Sci-Fi thrown in...
Revisado: 12-09-16
The story was good, it was compelling, I got to care about the characters. These are ALL good things for a book.
What I couldn't get past is the narration, it is bad. I give Meghan an A for effort, but a D- for execution. I appreciate narrators that change their voice for each character so that the listener can distinguish who is talking before getting to the "said character" bit of the sentence. I also appreciate appropriate accents for characters. Meghan, however, makes the female characters seem weak, the men seem oafish, and the accents aren't anywhere approaching accurate or believable.
The one part of the story I didn't like was near the end of the book when, after 11 (?) hours of zero sci-fi storyline suddenly aliens pop up? Random and unnecessary.
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