Sunday, June 5, 2016

Getting Started with Audiobooks


Okay, if you want to start listening to audiobooks, you’ve come to the right place. I’ve been addicted to audiobooks for about 4 years now. And since having kids, it’s become my primary method of reading. I’m happy to impart everything I’ve learned about finding great audiobooks with you.
1. Download the Overdrive app to your phone IMMEDIATELY. Overdrive will connect you to your local library's digital library. Through the app you can instantly download audiobooks, ebooks, and even some movies to your phone FOR FREE. I use Overdrive basically every day. I always check if I can get a audiobook on Overdrive before I buy it on Audible. Because FREE!!! 
2. Go to your local library. There you can find hundreds of books on CD or with their own individual media players that you can check out. I've listened to tons of books like this as well. Great resource.
3. Check out http://www.audiobooksync.com which is a program that offers 2 free audiobooks a week for 15 weeks each summer. That's 30 free audiobooks. These are a mix of fiction, nonfiction, classics, and newer releases, mostly geared to interest young readers (teens) but not all YA books at all. You have a one week window to download the 2 books if you want them or not if you don’t. 
4. Spotify has a category at the bottom of their genre/moods page called "Word" where you can listen to ALL KINDS OF THINGS. Classics, poetry, nonfiction, language studies, fairy tales, mythology, self-help, guided meditation, and on and on and on. It's awesome. I just browsed through there and want to listen to everything. 
5. Librivox.org allows you to listen (or record!) to books that are part of the public domain. Their website is full of classics, poetry, and the like that other normal avid readers like you have recorded for the world to enjoy in audio format. 
6. Free Audiobook apps provide a similar service. These are filled usually with official recordings of classics and older books in the public domain. These can be find easily doing a search for “free audiobooks” in your phone’s app store. 
If you try some of these formats and discover—as many do—that audiobooks are AMAZING and you want to try more that aren’t available for free, then a membership may be right for you. I’ll try to keep this brief. 
7. Audible is my preferred audiobook membership website/app (but it is not the only one. Audiobooks.com offers a similar deal but I have no experience with it). When you start with Audible you get 1 or 2 free audiobooks when you sign up depending on their promotions at the time which usually means you get the first month or two free. A standard membership is $15/mo which gets you one book/mo (1 credit = 1 audiobook). Since audiobooks costs upwards of $20 each, it's a better deal than paying full price. The other plans are (rounded out) $23/mo for 2 credits, $150/year for 12 all at once, or $230 for 24 all at once. These are then digital books you own forever and can download or delete from your device but always remains in your library (unless you return it—they do have a pretty great return policy).
There are other benefits to and Audible membership: On top of your credits, membership gives you access to their entire catalog of books at a discount. So if you spend your credit, then you can buy whatever other books you want still at a cheaper price than normal. You also have access to their sales, which they run often. They have daily deals. Sometimes they run 2-for-1 or 3-for-2 sales where you get more than 1 book per credit. I LOVE those. Sometimes they have $5 sales or whatever. (It is always important to see if the cost of the book is less than your monthly fee because you don't want to buy something available to you at $11 with your $15 credit. The best example of this is children's books. Most of those are less than $10. But the default for purchases is that it takes from your credit first. You just have to uncheck that option before buying.)
Another cool thing is Audible is an Amazon company. So a lot of books are able to be linked between Audible and Kindle with what they call WhisperSync. So you own, say, Pride and Prejudice in Kindle format, you can get the Audible version significantly marked down (or vice versa, although it’s important to buy them in the right order, usually Kindle then Audible). This is a great way to get a lot of classic books for free. I always check prices on things marked as WhisperSync. Sometimes I can pay a few bucks for the ebook and a few bucks for the audio and together they're cheaper than my credit. Then on your device you can switch between the audio and ebook formats, and it will sync up with wherever you left off in the other format. Very cool.  
8. Recommendations for beginners (from my actual listening experience): 
-Mysteries/Thrillers: Girl on the Train, Gone Girl, and Fight Club (that’s a thriller sort of, right? I don’t even know) were both excellent listens. 
-Sci Fi/Fantasy: Illuminae, Ready Player One, Armada, Chronicles of Narnia (BBC full cast audio), Ender’s Game Alive, and Outlander (which counts as fantasy apparently, but I’d still shelve it with my historical fiction, I think. Or romance Whatever.). Also The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows of Ava Lavender and the entire Harry Potter series (obviously), and The Night Circus. Also and especially The Lunar Chronicles, The Daughter of Smoke and Bone Trilogy, and The Scorpio Races by Maggie Stiefvater (these YA books are not merely great listens but personal favorites of mine which I hope you love). I could probably stay in this category forever.
-Memoir/Autobiography: Rob Lowe’s two memoirs Stories I Only Tell My Friends and Love Life both moved me to tears and satisfied me need for insider Hollywood information. Other great listens are those by Tina Fey, Mindy Kaling, Shonda Rhimes, Nora Ephron, and Elizabeth Gilbert (specifically Big Magic which might not be considered a memoir but is amazing). 
-Literary: The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, The Time-Traveler’s Wife, The Help, The Book of Speculation <3 <3 <3
-Contemporary: Me Before You, Fangirl, Eleanor & Park, Silver Linings Playbook, All the Bright Places, The Fault in Our Stars, The Royal We, To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before (series). 
-Historical: Code Name Verity, The Book Thief, Salt to the Sea <insert weeping emoji here>
-Classics: The Importance of Being Ernest, Sherlock Holmes, Shakespeare. (I’m not offering particular versions here because I’ve heard several. But trust me, it’s great to hear these particularly read/performed. Just start trying it out!)
If you’re stuck for ideas, here’s my GREAT AUDIOBOOKS Goodreads shelf. I’m particular about what gets listed there.
So tell me, do you listen to audiobooks? Give me some recommendations! And feel free to ask any questions if something I wrote doesn't make sense.

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