The Unnamable
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Narrated by:
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Sean Barrett
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By:
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Samuel Beckett
About this listen
The Unnamable is the third novel in Beckett's trilogy, three remarkable prose works in which men of increasingly debilitating physical circumstances act, ponder, consider, and rage against impermanence and the human condition. The Unnamable is without doubt the most uncompromising text and it is read here in startling fashion by Sean Barrett.
Download the accompanying reference guide.©2005 NAXOS AudioBooks Ltd. (P)2005 NAXOS AudioBooks Ltd.Listeners also enjoyed...
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- Unabridged
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Johnnie Rico never really intended to join up—and definitely not the infantry. But now that he’s in the thick of it, trying to get through combat training harder than anything he could have imagined, he knows everyone in his unit is one bad move away from buying the farm in the interstellar war the Terran Federation is waging against the Arachnids. Because everyone in the Mobile Infantry fights. And if the training doesn’t kill you, the Bugs are more than ready to finish the job.
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The definitive version!
- By Kristopher G. Hesson on 10-03-24
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Brain Damage
- By: Freida McFadden
- Narrated by: Megan Tusing
- Length: 9 hrs and 32 mins
- Unabridged
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As Charly struggles to recover from her brain injury, she begins to realize that the events of that fateful night are trapped in the damaged right side of her brain. Now, she must put the jigsaw pieces together to discover the identity of the man who tried to kill her...before he finishes the job he started.
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Who Else Laughed, Cried, and Shuddered?
- By Jennifer Chichester on 09-16-22
By: Freida McFadden
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Ghost Stories: Stephen Fry's Definitive Collection
- By: Stephen Fry, Washington Irving, M.R. James, and others
- Narrated by: Stephen Fry
- Length: 8 hrs and 18 mins
- Unabridged
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As the days grow shorter and the temperature drops, Halloween approaches. Come, brave listener, pull up a chair, and spend some time with master storyteller Stephen Fry as he tells us some of his favourite ghost stories of all time, in truly terrifying spatial audio. From the headless horseman of Sleepy Hollow to the tortured spirits of M.R. James, from Edgar Allan Poe’s terrifying tale of a doppelganger to Charlotte Riddell’s Open Door that should definitely stay shut, join Stephen as he tells you some truly terrifying tales.
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Wonderful narration. Mediocre stories.
- By Michael Fuchs on 11-07-23
By: Stephen Fry, and others
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Dead Med
- By: Freida McFadden
- Narrated by: Patricia Santomasso, Scott Merriman
- Length: 10 hrs and 3 mins
- Unabridged
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When Heather McKinley dreamed of becoming a doctor, she imagined curing sick kids and sporting pink stethoscopes. She never anticipated the sleepless nights, grueling exams, and endless labs. And she certainly never knew that her medical school earned the nickname Dead Med thanks to the tragic history of students overdosing on illegal drugs. But Heather would never consider doing anything like that. That is, until her longtime boyfriend dumps her, she finds herself failing anatomy, and her world starts to crumble.
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Hmm
- By Morgan Meaux on 08-22-24
By: Freida McFadden
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Written initially in French, later translated by the author into English, Molloy is the first book in Dublin-born Samuel Beckett's trilogy. It was published shortly after WWII and marked a new, mature writing style, which was to dominate the remainder of his working life. Molloy is less a novel than a set of two monologues narrated by Molloy and his pursuer, Moran.
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Nauseating, boring, hilarious, and magnificent
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fire
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There is now no doubt that not only is Waiting for Godot the outstanding play of the 20th century, but it is also Samuel Beckett's masterpiece. Yet it is both a popular text to be studied at school and an enigma. The scene is a country road. There is a solitary tree. It is evening. Two tramp-like figures, Vladimir and Estragon, exchange words. Pull off boots. Munch a root vegetable. Two other curious characters enter. And a boy. Time passes. It is all strange yet familiar.
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Nauseating, boring, hilarious, and magnificent
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Great performance!
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Overall
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'The sun shone, having no alternative, on the nothing new.' So opens Murphy, Samuel Beckett's first novel, published in 1938. Its work-shy eponymous hero, adrift in London, realises that desire can never be satisfied and withdraws from life, in search of stupor. Murphy's lovestruck fiancée, Celia, tries with tragic pathos to draw him back, but her attempts are doomed to failure. In Dublin, Murphy's friends and familiars are simulacra of him, fragmented and incomplete. They come to London in search of him.
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Not a book one reads but inhabits & floats through
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One of the Masterpieces of 20th Philosophy
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Flann O'Brien's most popular and surrealistic novel concerns an imaginary, hellish village police force and a local murder.
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Hell is other people's bicycles.
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Being and Time
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Being and Time was published in 1927 during the Weimar period in Germany, a time of political, social and economic turmoil. Heidegger himself did not escape the pressures and his nationalism, and undeniable anti-Semitism in the following decades cast a shadow over the man, but not the work. Being and Time is not coloured by expressions of his later views (unlike other writings) and remains an outstanding document.
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Surprised it works as audio
- By Anonymous on 02-02-20
By: Martin Heidegger
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Nostromo
- A Tale of the Seaboard
- By: Joseph Conrad
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Overall
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Story
One of the greatest political novels in any language, Nostromo reenacts the establishment of modern capitalism in a remote South American province locked between the Andes and the Pacific. In Sulaco, a harbor town in the imaginary South American republic of Costaguana, a vivid cast of characters is caught up in a civil war to decide whether its fabulously wealthy silver can be preserved from the hands of venal politicians.
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Page-turning masterpiece garbled by narrator
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By: Joseph Conrad
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The Book of Disquiet
- By: Fernando Pessoa
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- Unabridged
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Assembled from notes and jottings left unpublished at the time of the author’s death, The Book of Disquiet is a collection of aphoristic prose-poetry musings on dreams, solitude, time and memory. Credited to Pessoa’s alter ego, Bernardo Soares, who chronicles his contemplations in this so-called "factless" autobiography, the work is a journey of one man’s soul and, by extension, of all human souls that allow their minds and hearts to roam far and free.
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The book that saved my life
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What listeners say about The Unnamable
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Overall
- Deskspud
- 11-30-10
Amazing Trilogy
These books were so full of mad sanity it can be difficult to stay "on the bycycle." Malloy was the easiest for me; he is so hysterically original. But they become more serious as they move along; the characters voices assuming a more bitter maturity. Beckett is a world class poet and I'm out of my depth without larger insights than my own to follow but I loved the adventure and will enjoy listening to them repeatedly for years to come.
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6 people found this helpful
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- Brenda O
- 12-08-16
I can't, I must
The dialogue, be it inner or among three minds, it's captivating, best work, great narration
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- Katie Hazes
- 04-30-15
Wonderful
The narration is impeccable. Each clause considered and rendered brilliantly. Reverential, at the very least, perhaps even done with love.
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1 person found this helpful
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- JCW
- 05-05-18
The No One Who is Everyone is not You or is It?
This dramatic monologue is like nothing you can ever imagine or will ever experience again. Sean Barrett gives a stellar performance that is intriguing and absolutely wonderful, incredible, and remarkable while depicting life’s tragedies interspersed with many comical elements. The mixture of delusional insanity fluctuating with moments of lucid sanity will make you question your own sanity in listening to these rambling moments of despair. The narrator’s inner voice makes him wonder, is he really the author of his own thoughts or just a convenient vehicle of how the Silence manipulates him. Did you ever wonder where you thoughts come from or where they disappear to? If you are not steeped in German Idealism and its existential enquiries into the origins of the ego’s transcendental subjectivity, you will find this confusing and nearly impossible to follow, which may be Beckett’s intention. The challenge has been proffered here; how do you make sense out of what seems total, irrational nonsense? Life’s conundrum is in full display. I found this dramatic monologue ingenious and quite entertaining.
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- Michael McManus
- 07-25-21
The unnameable
I went on amazing and painful wonderful performance by reader ok five or so more words
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- Ben Weilbacher
- 08-31-22
Best Performance on Audible
This is the definitive way to experience a book I previously considered unadaptable. Arguably the greatest novel exploration of the raw self, with a fittingly mad yet eerily lucid performance by Barrett.
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- Erez
- 12-31-08
Best narration I have ever heard
This book is a long and disjointed monologue of some (unnamable) being, trying to determine what it/he really is. He is sometimes waiting to die, sometimes waiting to be born, always struggling with facts, sensations and language itself in the search of himself. Definitely not for everybody, but extremely funny in its way, and well worth the effort in my opinion.
But the narration here is simply astounding. Sean Barrett brings this incredibly difficult, almost inaccessible work to life in a way I never imagined possible. The same also goes for his work on "Molloy" and "Malone Dies", but this book is truly the hardest of the three, and Mr. Barrett reads it perfectly.
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20 people found this helpful
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- Barry
- 12-19-16
The Unstory
I regret not reading the first two books in the trilogy first (Molloy and Malone Dies). This book clearly pushes the limits of what can be said without reference to other people or things. Well, he does talk about other things but the effect is of being isolated outside of time and place; of being stuck without any external stimuli to respond to for all eternity. Hell. Probably. Unless it isn't. But there I go again. Absurdist seems like too frivolous a name for this genre, but I believe that is the usual classification. Whether the two prior books would have made this any more meaningful, they would at least have given a little context for this character. Read on its own, it is so unrelentingly bleak, it makes Waiting for Godot seem like a walk in the park. Back to the limits of what can be said without plot or character, Beckett is the master of this sort of thing. Just when you think there's nothing more to be said, and you're thinking you can't take any more of it, he manages to milk one more topic for his amorphous protagonist to rant about. But he knows when to stop. I can't say I was sorry when it was over, but I can't say I didn't appreciate this strange intellectual exercise either. I think there is a certain appropriateness in listening to this as opposed to reading it on paper. The protagonist is stuck listening to his own thoughts in real time. A similar phenomenon afflicts the brave listener willing to take on this audiobook. Good luck.
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3 people found this helpful
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- world music lover
- 02-17-18
Profound story, beautiful Irish voice
Third in trilogy Molloy, Malone Dies, and The Unnamable. Listen to all three in a row. Beckett's finest writing. Sean Barrett's performance is the best I've experienced on audible. Perfect reading of Beckett. What could be better?
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- J. B.
- 11-24-21
Perfect Abstraction
Want to torture your brain? Read forwards, then backwards, paragraph by paragraph, or sentence, or ?¿
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