A gifted mimic and clever narrator, Rupert Degas brings Orwell’s classic satire vividly to life. Host Jo Reed and AudioFile contributor Alan Minskoff discuss Degas’s marvelous narration. What stays with the listener is his ability to endow Orwell’s animal characters with their own distinct sounds and accents — their individuality elevates the narration. This witty and engaging send-up of authoritarianism’s perils comes at an opportune time. These days Orwell’s anti-Stalinist fable rings true, and the audiobook satisfies on every level.
Read the full review of the audiobook on AudioFile’s website. Published by Dreamscape.
Find more audiobook recommendations at audiofilemagazine.com
Today’s episode is sponsored by Naxos AudioBooks. The Book of Margery Kempe is the extraordinary account of a medieval wife, mother and mystic from Norfolk. Known as the earliest autobiography in the English language, it contains intimate portraits of people and places, and a remarkable eye for detail, as it traces the transformation of a self-described ‘sinful wretch’ to a holy pilgrim. It is read by Lucy Scott. To learn more, visit NaxosAudioBooks.com
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