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发表于 2016-1-29 11:03:32
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本帖最后由 kevinmzm 于 2016-1-29 14:00 编辑
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4 `8 ?3 R7 N5 B( GHave listened to some hundreds of English audiobooks in the past more than a dozen years and some narrators impressed me very much but, blushful to say, I have not kept track of their names. Just finished listening to Tolstoy's War and Peace and its narrator, Frederick Davidson, is one of my favorites. Also listened to Marcel Proust's Remembrance of Things Past and its narrator, Neville Jason, has a very enchanting voice and I think I have also listened to several other books read by him. Alexander Scourge's entire reading of The Bible is very mesmerising. If one wants to enjoy really super audio things, I should like to make an especial mention of The Complete Arkangel Shakespeare: 38 Fully-Dramatised Plays. All the performers in them use their voices to create vividly their respective roles. In my opinion, listening to this series of Shakespeare's plays evoke more feelings in me than watching BBC's complete stage performances. That's why I only watched a few of the latter but listened to almost twenty of the former (for some plays, two or three times). Hope to finish the whole set in the next few years! Christian Rodska's reading of Winston Churchill's A History of the English Speaking People and The Second World War (both consisting of several volumes) is also very recommendable!2 \0 f* Q+ a% l, \- ~3 h( j
I'll see if I can make a longer list of the narrators I like, including some lady narrators, when I have more free time to make a retrospective look at the audiobooks I have listened to. And there are still perhaps about a thousand (or even more) that I have downloaded but have not yet got around to listen to, including two or three hundred very excellent TTC audio courses! |
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