Haystack posted:Thread favorite Dungeon Crawler Carl I'm now on book 5, I can't believe how fast I went from "oh this is cute and silly fun," to "Wait is this actually good?" Deep Glove Bruno posted:I thought the Sapkowski Witcher series did this especially well. I think the narrator's name is Peter Kenny. The October Daye books have a narrator, Mary Robinette, that does a huge amount of distinct voices , if you like urban fantasy.
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# ? Apr 20, 2024 13:34 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 18:39 |
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Soonmot posted:I'm now on book 5, I can't believe how fast I went from "oh this is cute and silly fun," to "Wait is this actually good?" For me, the Hoarder was the tipping point where the book went from merely interesting to excellent. What an amazingly hosed up and poignant setpiece.
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# ? Apr 20, 2024 15:01 |
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Soonmot posted:I'm now on book 5, I can't believe how fast I went from "oh this is cute and silly fun," to "Wait is this actually good?" I had this experience with Cradle a while back, and I’m currently watching a friend fall deep into the light novel / webnovel hole on that same progression. I’m reasonably certain what’s happening is our brains are just being terraformed by this stuff. Expose yourself to enough of something that’s just good enough to get past your filters, and you can start building up engagement with it. Like, I would hesitate to call the Cradle series good books, but they’re fun and trivially easy to read, so you can ingest huge amounts of it, and at a certain point you’ve spent so much time with those characters that the fact that its prose is mediocre at best stops mattering.
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# ? Apr 21, 2024 22:32 |
I'm a comic book fan, I understand that type of thing lol. With DCC, I actually think the books are Good. Not just familiar or comfortable. The way you learn about Carl's relationship with his ex, his father and mother, the trauma he's already been through, really works. Learning how to hold onto your humanity in a horrible situation, or with Donut, maturing into a caring person instead of a self centered child. Themes of found family or capitalism eating itself along side everything else, the bits of body horror sprinkled throughout. It's good. Do we have a thread for DCC, I hate to keep derailing this one?
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# ? Apr 21, 2024 23:15 |
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Soonmot posted:I'm a comic book fan, I understand that type of thing lol. Looks like it gets discussed in the Web Serials thread, though I'm not sure how much.
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# ? Apr 22, 2024 02:30 |
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Soonmot posted:With DCC, I actually think the books are Good. Not just familiar or comfortable. The way you learn about Carl's relationship with his ex, his father and mother, the trauma he's already been through, really works. Learning how to hold onto your humanity in a horrible situation, or with Donut, maturing into a caring person instead of a self centered child. Themes of found family or capitalism eating itself along side everything else, the bits of body horror sprinkled throughout. It's good. I'm a guy who basically doesn't cry, and DCC and Jeff Hayes have gotten me to choke up more than once. You're right - it's GOOD. The tough part is working up the guts to recommend it to other people, because it's LitRPG and it's called loving Dungeon Crawler Carl.
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# ? Apr 22, 2024 19:27 |
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Yeah, I will freely admit, I almost turned off DCC in the first hour because "Oh loving lord it's about some stupid Manly fuckhead with an Evil Slut Girlfriend getting magic powers and going to an isekai world" gave me hives, and if not for the excellent work of the reader there is no way I would have gotten far enough into it to actually like it.
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# ? Apr 22, 2024 19:49 |
lol i felt the same way, especially with how Hayes voices Carl, double so because a few years ago I decided not to read any books about straight white guys by straight white guys, but also i'm not gonna NOT finish an audiobook, and there was enough cute stuff to keep me interested, especially once Donut transforms. Then, like Haystack posted above, by the time they got to the Horder scene, I was 100% on board this stupid ride. So this was originally a web serial? That explains the recapping that seems to happen a lot.
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# ? Apr 22, 2024 23:17 |
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I've been getting into Marvel Comics as of late and I had no idea that, not only are there many Marvel prose stories and novelizations of important comic storylines, many of those have been turned into audiobooks. I was curious if anyone here has tried any? If not, maybe you'll have some interest. I'm getting sucked into a rabbit hole myself. X-Men and Spider-Man: Time's Arrow: A Marvel Omnibus X-Men Mutant Empire Daredevil: Predator's Smile. I pickd this one up since I'm in a DD mood and figured why not. Apparently mostly about Bullseye. Then there are novelizations of important comics stories: Daredevil: Guardian Devil I've head ithe original story is not great but it is kinda important so I might just listen to this rather than read teh comic, I dunno. Daredevil: The Man Without Fear X-Men: The Dark Phoenix Saga.
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# ? May 4, 2024 14:00 |
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The man called M posted:Going through the Penguin version of the Night Watch stories in Discworld. Are there any other audiobooks that aren’t Discworld where the narrator does different voices for the characters well? As mentioned, Moira Quirke is a delight. I've found that Kobna Holbrook-Smith's narration and character voices in the Rivers of London are fantastic, to the point that the author has been adding characters to challenge him. Non fantasy, the narrator of Slough House is so good, just the right amount of droll.
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# ? May 6, 2024 16:39 |
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NikkolasKing posted:I've been getting into Marvel Comics as of late and I had no idea that, not only are there many Marvel prose stories and novelizations of important comic storylines, many of those have been turned into audiobooks. I was curious if anyone here has tried any? If not, maybe you'll have some interest. I'm getting sucked into a rabbit hole myself. I remember reading and liking Time's Arrow as a kid but I have no idea if it'd hold up now.
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# ? May 6, 2024 16:44 |
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NikkolasKing posted:I've been getting into Marvel Comics as of late and I had no idea that, not only are there many Marvel prose stories and novelizations of important comic storylines, many of those have been turned into audiobooks. I was curious if anyone here has tried any? If not, maybe you'll have some interest. I'm getting sucked into a rabbit hole myself. Right as I had managed to accumulate 2 credits.... Thanks though!
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# ? May 6, 2024 20:28 |
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I noticed 1-6 of the Murderbot Diaries are available in the Audible Plus catalogue, so I've started listening to them. Absolutely great audiobooks that I'm really enjoying.
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# ? May 14, 2024 12:32 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 18:39 |
Those are incredibly good, yes.
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# ? May 14, 2024 19:24 |