OrlandoNative wrote:Personally, I don't listen to audiobooks. The printed page has always been more interesting. I suppose if I were going to listen - rather than observe the scenery - on some long driving trip maybe; but for the series I tend to follow; I prefer "hardcopy".
What's interesting, outside of whatever motivation or accident may have "infected" this particular audiobook; is that NO ONE caught it. One would *think* that the audiobook producer would have someone OTHER than the narrator listen to the "finished product" while simultaneously reading it. While I'm sure small errors might still creep through, something that major shouldn't have.
I guess "quality assurance" isn't the norm these days.
Of course, I've seen glaring editing errors even in hardcopy (and I'm not talking about the (e)ARC's either); so I guess it's not all that odd that something might show up in an audiobook as well.
I do both but I can't read at work, I can however listen to the audiobook. I also found when I got the audiobooks I noticed details in the books I'd read several times that I'd missed previously. I understand why RFC is upset, but as a listener I'd rather the difficulty with Wyman than the one with someone like Keating. What Wyman did was readily fixed with a little editing. Audible let's you update your downloads so if I listen to it now it is fine. A problem like Keating can't be resolved without completely re-recording the book. I'd love to see that happen some day with Safehold if they can get a good reader in. Consistency in pronunciation and accents would improve my enjoyment of the series a great deal.