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Spoken word selections for spring
REVIEWS BY SUKEY HOWARD
By Rohinton Mistry Random House AudioBooks, $25.95 ISBN 0553756141
All for artA woman painter who earns a living with her art? Not so unusual today, but Artemisia Gentileschi was born in 1593, when women didn't do that sort of thing. Now, Susan Vreeland gives us a fascinating novel about this fascinating historical figure in The Passion of Artemisia, read in its entirety by Gigi Bermingham. Raped at the age of 17 by her father's best friend, Artemisia was dragged through a scandalous, humiliating trial in Rome, then married off to a mediocre Florentine painter who cared little for her. Yet, Florence was where she overcame the prejudices of her day with her prodigious talent and where she first won the patronage of the wealthy and titled. Set in the great cities of Baroque Italy, where life for a painter could be both glamorous and humbling, Vreeland evokes an Artemisia as bold and brave and passionate as the paintings she created.
By Susan Vreeland HighBridge Audio, $34.95 ISBN 1565115252
More ElmoreElmore Leonard has done it again. He has come up with a prime crime caper with the smart, snappy dialogue we've come to expect, a cast of crazy characters -- including members of the drug-manufacturing Dixie Mafia, some Detroit toughs, a high-diving hero, a top-of-the-line scam artist and an assortment of fine, feisty women -- and a plot that does more than thicken. Tishomingo Blues is set in Tunica, Mississippi, "the Casino Capital of the South," before, during and after a Civil War re-enactment. There's a pitched battle (not exactly what the war-buffs had in mind), pitched woo (licit and ill-) and a perfect-pitch reading by Frank Muller, one of our foremost audio performers, who does the accents -- black, white, Chicano, male, female, Northern and Southern -- with uncanny ease.
By Elmore Leonard HarperAudio, $34.95 ISBN 0060011173
Good cop or bad cop?"What I don't do is solve murder cases or disprove cases that have already been made by the police." But that's exactly what Derek Strange, ex-D.C. cop and owner of Strange Investigations, does in George Pelecanos' unsettling, moody mystery novel, Right as Rain. The case Strange takes on involves the killing of a black cop by a white cop. Terry Quinn, the white cop, was cleared, but the dead man's mother wants her son's good name restored and wants to know whether it was a real case of mistaken identity or racially motivated manslaughter. Hard to tell even when all the sordid facts are sorted out, all the complex connections made -- even when Strange and Quinn, who face down some truly nasty folks together, get to be almost friends. Richard Allen, whose credits aren't given on the packaging, does an excellent job with the narrative and the dialogue, getting both black and white voices right as rain.
By George Pelecanos Brilliance Audio, $24.95 ISBN 1587889625
The WordIn The Beginning: The King James Bible and How It Changed a Nation, a Language, and a Culture is that wonderful and rare kind of audio -- one that both educates and entertains. Alister McGrath, molecular biologist and Bible scholar, has done his research superbly and covers what his ambitious subtitle lays out. The King James Bible was published in 1611, but McGrath, who reads here, starts much farther back in time, putting this fascinating story, this biography of the Book, into a wide historical context. He includes politics and intrigue, the development of printing, the Reformation and its broad-ranging repercussions, the emergence of England as a maritime power and English as a language of all its people. The goal of those who worked on the King James edition was to translate the Bible into living English. And so they did, not knowing that they had created one the most important and influential works of literature ever written.
By Alister McGrath Audio Editions, $24.95 ISBN 1572702494
Sukey Howard reports on spoken word audio each month. |