2013 was an up and down year for me. While I achieved some wonderful personal goals, I have also experienced some of the toughest trials and tribulations of my life. Some of that has been reflected on this blog and social media, where my presence is not as active as it once was. Typically, when I write this list, I give a statistical breakdown of my listening. While my overall consumption of audiobooks was up this year, my tracking, recording and reviewing of them were down. In 2013 I reviewed I posted 164 reviews of audiobooks, many of them including multiple titles. Roughly, I believe I listened to around 200 books his year, which would exceed my highest previous total.
2013 was a great year for audio. Any of the Top 5 titles in my list could have been contenders in any previous year. There were so many books that simply blew me away. It is always tough for me to choose my favorites. Instead of asking "What were the best books of 2013?" the question I asked, upon reflecting on the year is "What 2013 books affected me the most?" Whether through heart stopping action, stylistic writing or characters that stay with you, these are the books that lingered in my brain long after they finished. Some made me laugh, a few made me cry, and some made me cringe and want to grab on the closest person near me for a comforting hug.
When compiling this list, I also look for titles that truly stand out in the audio format. Scanning over this list, there is only one title I would say that the narration didn’t enhance the experience, yet that book was full of such awesomeness that the less than amazing performance couldn’t keep it off the list. For a bit of a surprise, there are no Zombie titles and only one true apocalyptic title, so those of you who have pigeon holed me as the "zombie apocalypse guy" may be a bit shocked. Don’t worry, my favorite Zombie and Post Apocalyptic Audiobooks of 2013 list will be on its way.
So, thanks for sticking with me through 2013, and be sure to keep injecting stories into your brain through your earholes for the rest of 2014.
Love Minus Eighty by Will McIntosh
Read by Kevin T. Collins, Eileen Stevens, and Ali Ahn
Length: 11 Hrs 37 Min
Genre: Science Fiction
What I Said: Love Minus Eighty is one of the most engrossing science fiction novels I have read in a long time. McIntosh has created a darkly beautiful near future world and populated it with characters you truly wish were real. It is an exploration of our romantic future and an affective romance all in one wonderful novel.
Read by Luke Daniels
Length: 12 Hrs 35 Min.
Genre: Sci-Fi Thriller
What I Said: Brilliance is a smart blockbuster movie for your brain, with a complex and engaging main character, a stunningly created world, and so much action you should probably keep your cardiologist on Speed Dial. It’s a a straight thriller with enough science fiction elements that I want to force all my Speculative Fiction friends to read, at gun point if necessary. I absolutely loved this book.
Read by Will Patton
MALE NARRATOR PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR.
Length: 18 Hrs 35 Min
Genre: Horror
What I Said: Doctor Sleep is an audiobook that will linger with me for a long time, a wonderful and moving story combined with one of the favorite narrator performances of all time. Doctor Sleep is a prime example of just how special the medium can be.
Extinction Machine by Jonathan Maberry (Joe Ledger, Bk. 5)
Read by Ray Porter
Length: 14 Hrs 58 Min
Genre: Science Thriller
What I Said: Extinction Machine is like a sick blend of The X-Files and 24, amped up on meth, laced with cocaine, marinated in Jolt cola and mainlined directly into my brain through my earholes. I absolutely loved this book. It’s a novel so tailored to my likes that I briefly wondered if my 2-year-old self was correct and the world actually does revolve around me.
Read by Benjamin Percy
Length: 21 Hrs 43 Min
Genre: Literary Horror
What I Said: Benjamin Percy’s Red Moon tells the tale of the afflicted, the demagogues and the victims that this world of werewolves has created. It combines the detailed political and social alternate history of Harry Turtledove or Robert Conroy with the gut level horror of Stephen King told with a literary flair that escalates the novel beyond its influences.
Life After Life by Kate Atkinson
Read by Fenella Woolgar
Length: 15 Hrs 34 Min
Genre: Fiction
What I Said: Life After Life is a novel that defies easy categorization. It’s a genre busting look at life in the 20th century through the eyes of a normal women given the extraordinary ability to relive her life. Life After Life is one of the most fascinating novels I have read in a long time, and while at times I felt dragged down by the melancholy of the tale, by the end, I wanted to keep experiencing the many lives of Ursula Todd.
NOS4A2 by Joe Hill
Read by Kate Mulgrew
FEMALE NARRTOR PERERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR
Harper Audio
Length: 19 Hrs 41 Min
Genre: Horror
What I Said: Joe Hill’s latest novel is lush vivid horror tale full of wonderful characters, and unsettling imagery. Hill manages to take the thing we love best, the innocence and joy of Christmas time, and flip it on its head, making it a representation of all that we fear. NOS4A2 is brilliantly executed, leaving a lingering affect on the reader long after it is over.
Warbound, Book III of the Grimnoir Chronicles by Larry Correia
Read by Bronson Pinchot
Audible Frontiers
Length: 17 Hrs 1 Min
Genre: Alternate History Urban Fantasy/Steampunk Superheroes.
What I Said: Larry Correia brings the arc than began in Hard Magic to a natural and completely satisfying conclusion in Warbound. With a combination of amazing storytelling, wonderful characters and one of the best narrator performances I have experienced, The Grimnoir Chronicles has earned it place as perhaps my favorite all time Speculative Fiction Audiobook series.
The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman
Read by Neil Gaiman
Length: 5 Hrs 48 Min
Genre: Fantasy
What I Said: I loved every moment of The Ocean at the End of the Lane. It is the rare book that from the wonderful start to the bitter end, kept me enthralled in its words, a prisoner to the next sentence and situation. The Ocean at the End of the Lane reminded me of why I read.
American Elsewhere by Robert Jackson Bennett
Read by Graham Winton
Length: 22 Hrs 23 Min
Genre: Science Fiction
What I Said: Robert Jackson Bennett takes on the American Dream, and twists it in so many bizarre ways it becomes a kaleidoscope of what-the-fuckery. An engaging plot full of wonderful characters, that Bennett sends on one of the weirdest, wildest sciency fiction adventures my poor brain has ever had to process. Some narration issues may have held back some of it’s overall potential, but it’s still one heck of a good listen.
The Doll by Taylor Stevens (Vanessa Michael Monroe, Bk. 3)
Read by Hillary Huber
Length: 13 Hrs 46 Min
Genre: Thriller
What I Said: In The Doll, Taylor strips away the trappings of her writing and presents a balls to the wall fast paced action thriller that will leave the reader awash in adrenaline soaked bliss. While her normal touches are still there, her vivid international setting, her complicated character’s unique skill set and her spin on typical action hero motivations, the action in The Doll is crisp and mean which makes it the most satisfying entry in an already excellent series.
The Martian by Andy Weir
Read by RC Bray
Length: 10 Hrs 28 Min
Genre: Science Fiction
What I Said: The Martian is probably my biggest surprise awesome audiobook this year. If you like realistic space travel tales, with cursing, 70′s pop culture references, laugh out loud one lines and plenty of fascinating creative science and engineering problem solving, download this sucker now. It’s really good.
The Daylight War by Peter V. Brett (The Demon Cycle, Bk. 3)
Read by Pete Bradbury
Length: 26 Hrs 51 Min
Genre: Fantasy
What I Said: The Daylight War is not just a wonderful edition in perhaps my favorite fantasy series, but the proof of the validity of the trust I have put in Brett as a unique storyteller. The Daylight War continues with the characters and themes we loved in the first two novels, yet also manages to take the story in a whole new direction. While the clash of cultures is brilliantly done, and the increased menace of the demonic enemy even scarier, it’s the intricate relationships that Brett has built that is the true beauty of this novel.
The Mad Scientist’s Daughter by Cassandra Rose Clarke
Read by Kate Rudd
Angry Robot on Brilliance Audio
Length: 12 Hrs 9 Min
Genre: Science Fiction
What I Said: : The Mad Scientist’s Daughter is a melancholy near future tale of love, family and robots, told on a canvas of a fascinating post disaster world. She fills her world with fully realized, flawed characters that filled me with joy as they were pissing me off. Clarke has managed to create a wonderful science fiction tale with a romantic tilt that I totally bought into. which isn’t the easiest of feats.
The Gods of Guilt by Michael Connelly (Mickey Haller, Bk. 5)
Read by Peter Giles
Hachette Audio
Length: 11 Hrs 49 Min
Genre: Legal Thriller
Why I Chose It: Connelly continues to prove he is a master of both plotting and characterization as he guides his broken creation, criminal defense lawyer Mickey Haller, along a bumpy road to redemption. Connelly redefines the concepts of innocence here, both legally and morally, while creating a compelling procedural tale. Giles continues to give a masterfully subtle performance that captures the nuances of Connelly’s writing.
The Thicket by Joe Lansdale
Read by Will Collyer
Hachette Audio
Length: 10 Hrs 19 Min
Genre: Historical Western/Thriller
Why I Chose It: I tend not to be a huge fan of historical/western tales, but The Thicket simply blew me away. Lansdale’s writing has a way of sneaking up on you. There are no bells and whistles, just straight forward storytelling, that surprises you with it’s emotional depth, colorful characters and dark humor. Collyer is quickly becoming a go to narrator for me. His performance of 16 year old Jack Parker manages to balance the naiveté and maturity of a young man forced to grown up due to tragedy.
The City of Devi by Manil Suri
Read by Vikas Adam and Priya Ayyar
Length: 14 Hrs 17 Min
Genre: Literary Post Apocalypse
Quick Thoughts: The City of Devi was never an easy tale for me, I often felt uncomfortable with not just the action but my reaction, yet, it was also a lot of crazy fun. For me, this tale worked on so many levels, creating a sort of beautiful mosaic of apocalyptic themes, strange love, and over the top absurdity.
Sycamore Row by John Grisham
Read by Michael Beck
Random House Audio
Length: 20 Hrs 50 Min
Genre: Legal Thriller
Why I Chose It: Grisham returns to Clanton and his Jake Brigance character in a tale that rivals the A Time To Kill. Honestly, if you told me that Grisham would appear on my Top 20 list, I would have yelled OBJECTION! but Sycamore Row manages to be a effective legal thriller as well as a socially poignant tale. What makes matters even better is Michael Beck’s narration which is emotionally charged and pitch perfect. His performance enhances this novel, giving it a bump over a few other stellar legal thrillers this year, like Sheehan’s A Lawyer’s Lawyer and Ellis’s The Last Alibi.
While I have only listened to a handful of your picks, I totally agree with the ones that I have.
I have listened to a few of those and totally agree the narration was great 🙂 (Notice how I said narration because Brilliance the story didn’t wow me)!
WHAT!!! Hee Heee… I absolutely loved Brilliance. I don’t think I breathed once during the entire listen, but I also know my taste shockingly don’t always match up with others. Not sure why? Probably Satan.
I loved Brilliance, looking forward to the next book
I’m interested in giving Love Minus Eighty and Life After Life a shot sometime. Thanks for sharing your favorites!
LOVE MINUS EIGHTY is definitely not a typical Bob book, more character driven and melancholy, but brilliant concepts and characters that will never leave you. It’s basically more of a story about love than a love story (that’s what I tell myself.)
Oooh, I really want to read (maybe even on audio) Love Minus Eighty, especially since in your above comment you call it more character-driven. THIS IS MY THING. *bounces*
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So much overlap with my favorites (Love Minus Eighty, Life After Life, The City of Devi, The Thicket, American Elsewhere, The Ocean at the End of the Lane), then some that I have on my pile (NOS4A2, Brilliance, Doctor Sleep, Red Moon, The Martian), and then a bunch that I didn’t really even consider too strongly. Hm… As usual, now I have some shuffling to do. 🙂
Great list! I totally enjoyed Love Minus Eighty, The Ocean at the End of the Lane, NOS4A2, and The Thicket. There are so many titles here that I still need to get to. Thanks for sharing!
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