Tag Archives: #books

Do Audiobooks Count as Reading?

How I like to get my audiobook on

In a piece for The New York Times, Brian Bannon, chief librarian at the New York Public Library, answers a question I imagine many book club members worldwide have asked themselves at one time or another: “Do Audiobooks Count as Reading?”

In case you don’t have a digital subscription to the Times, I’ll highlight some of the more memorable points. Today, 41% of adults don’t believe audiobooks qualify as reading. Yet, as Bannon points out, “learning to read with the eyes starts with decoding, linking letters to sounds and meaning. But once those pathways are built, the brain draws on the same language network to make sense of words, whether they arrive through sight or sound.”

Audiobooks not only allow blind people to become “absorbed in the words, taking in their meaning,” but also assist people with dyslexia, like the author of the article, to “effortlessly absorb ideas and focus in a way I hadn’t before.”

Interestingly, listening to books is on the rise: “Audiobook sales reached about $2.2 billion in the United States last year. At the New York Public Library, audio circulation rose 65 percent in the past five years while circulation for print and e-books stayed flat — a pattern mirrored nationwide. Audio has overtaken e-books in driving growth.”

In my own book club, we 12 readers are never on the same page (groan) when it comes to how we “read” our shared literary journey every month. Although I don’t have any hard stats to back this up, I’d say we’re roughly 40% physical book, 30% e-book, and 30% audiobook. Personally, I’m around 50/50 with the physical copy and e-book (shout-out to the Toronto Public Library for having seemingly every book under the sun and free delivery of physical books to my home branch).

That being said, I do listen to the odd book now and again. In the case of Bono’s Surrender, that actually saved me. When I found myself not fully engrossed in the reading aspect of the story, I switched to the audiobook and ended up finishing it (all 845 hours . . . give or take) quite happily. In another instance, we read David Grann’s The Wager not long ago and a few of my fellow book club members swore by the audiobook, saying there was no chance they would have finished it without the euphonious voice of the man responsible for reading it to them.

On a final note, I liked loved the conclusion to the piece Brian Bannon wrote, as it essentially captures why I started a book club in the first place 16 years ago: “However we read — by eye, by ear or both — it all counts. What matters is that the words get in, the brain makes meaning and the identity of being a reader takes hold. We need more readers, however they get there.”

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2024 Literary Awards for Fiction

Literary Awards Season = Lots of Gift Choices

So it’s time to start shopping for holiday novels, assuming your friends, relatives, and colleagues have the time and interest in reading fiction. If you should find yourself to be so fortunate as to have a flamboyance not of flamingos but of bibliophiles in your life, you might consider some of this year’s top literary award winners and finalists. To simplify the process, I’ve put a few of them together here for your viewing pleasure. Happy shopping — and reading!

2024 Booker Prize (Winner: Orbital by Samantha Harvey)

  • Shortlist: James (Percival Everett), Creation Lake (Rachel Kushner), Held (Anne Michaels), The Safekeep (Yael van der Wouden), Stone Yard Devotional (Charlotte Wood)

2024 Nobel Prize for Literature (Winner: Han Kang)

  • Translated Works (English): The Vegetarian (2007), Greek Lessons (2011), Human Acts (2014), The White Book (2016), We Do Not Part (2021)

2024 Giller Prize (Winner: Held by Anne Michaels)

  • Shortlist: What I Know About You (Éric Chacour), Curiosities (Anne Fleming), Prairie Edge (Conor Kerr), Peacocks of Instagram (Deepa Rajagopalan)

 2024 Atwood Gibson Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize (Winner: Batshit Seven by Sheung-King)

  • Shortlist: What I Know About You (Éric Chacour), Prairie Edge (Conor Kerr), Code Noir (Canisia Lubrin), Hi, It’s Me (Fawn Parker)

2024 Governor General’s Literary Award for Fiction (Winner: Empty Spaces by Jordan Abel)

  • Shortlist: Code Noir (Canisia Lubrin), The Memoirs of Miss Chief Eagle Testickle: Vol. 1: A True and Exact Accounting of the History of Turtle Island (Kent Monkman, Gisèle Gordon), Her Body Among Animals (Paola Ferrante), Naniki (Oonya Kempadoo)

2024 National Book Award for Fiction (Winner: James by Percival Everett)

  • Finalists: Ghostroots (‘Pemi Aguda), Martyr! (Kaveh Akbar), All Fours (Miranda July), My Friends (Hisham Matar)

2024 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction (Winner: Night Watch by Jayne Anne Phillips)

  • Finalists: Same Bed Different Dreams (Ed Park), Wednesday’s Child (Yiyun Li)

International Booker Prize 2024 (Winner: Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck)

  • Shortlist: Not a River (Selva Almada), The Details (Ia Genberg), What I’d Rather Not Think About (Jente Posthuma), Mater 2-10 (Hwang Sok-yong), Crooked Plow (Itamar Vieira Junior)

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A Little Fluff Never Hurt Nobody

Image result for fluff

Let’s be clear here. A little literary fluff, in moderation, is a good thing. Like drinking a case of beer (without anyone else’s oral assistance) while watching Hockey Night in Canada. Or reciting poetry to sharpen your addled brain. Or indulging in poutine after said night of debauchery and preparing for the poetics part the following morning (a person needs energy!).

That’s all chicken noodle fluff for the soul.

Whatever the hell it is that made it onto this post as the Pic of the Day is not a good thing, in moderation or even once in your life. REPEAT: If you see the above product while shopping, call in a Code Blue, throw yourself in a tent, and rub those rosary beads you carry with you for good luck. Oh, and pray the jar doesn’t consume you.

Last week, I finished this month’s book club novel, Jennifer Egan’s Manhattan Beach, an impressively researched story about a young lady coming of age in New York City in the late 1930s and early 1940s,  freeing me up for a bit in between Curling Was Full choices. (Spoiler alert: Everyone dies at the end of Manhattan Beach when the Manhattan Project goes south and wipes out all the main characters, who’d taken refuge on a beach. Kind of a lame ending.)

Obviously I reached for the marshmallow fluff next, and just finished my latest Jack Reacher book (#20 in the series), Lee Child’s Make Me. I am now as content as a pig in…umm…a blanket?

Anyway, one of the reasons Mr. Child has my eternal love is that he doesn’t pretend to be anyone he’s not (or should I say JR doesn’t?). He has you hanging from page one, kicks some ass along the way in Nowhere, USA, then brings everything all together with a little bow on top. Nice.

But Lee Child’s real “piece of resistance” is the way he throws in facts, figures and stats. Unlike the Dan Brown Paradox, Mr. Child is not pretending to solve a centuries-old clue (except how some guys are always jacked up on testosterone maybe) when he discusses heavy subjects like suicide, the Gettysburg Address, and the dark web, all three of which he addresses in Make Me. More than that, he somehow makes it relevant to chasing bad guys around places like Mother’s Rest, Nebraska.

This got me to thinking, though. Trusting Goodreads as I do, I was curious what readers around the world considered the biggest pile of fluffy fluffiness. Well, I – and by extension you – now have the answer. Here’s the full list, but the Top 10 Most Popular Fluff Books goes like this, with Stephenie Meyer wearing the Empress’s New Clothes, Sophie Kinsella donning the queen’s crown, and Stephanie Perkins taking home the raciest title award.

1. Confessions of a Shopaholic, Sophie Kinsella

2. Twilight, Stephenie Meyer

3. Bridget Jones’s Diary, Helen Fielding

4. The Devil Wears Prada, Lauren Weisberger

5. New Moon, Stephenie Meyer

6. Can You Keep a Secret?, Sophie Kinsella

7. One for the Money, Janet Evanovich

8. Eclipse, Stephenie Meyer

9. Breaking Dawn, Stephenie Meyer

10. Anna and the French Kiss, Stephanie Perkins

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