Bangkok Post

WHEN LISTENING TO A BOOK BEATS READING IT

- Farhad Manjoo ©2021 THE NEW YORK TIMES Farhad Manjoo is a columnist for The New York Times.

Over the past few years, I have been obsessed with the work of Australian novelist Liane Moriarty. Yes, me and everyone else. Ever since her 2014 blockbuste­r, Big Little Lies, Moriarty has become one of the publishing industry’s most dependable hitmakers. Although her prose is unflashy and her subject matter seemingly pedestrian — Moriarty writes tightly plotted domestic dramas about middle- and upper-middle-class suburbanit­es — her observatio­ns are so precise, her characters’ psychology so well realised that I often find her stories burrowing deep into my brain and taking up long, noisy residence there. It’s no wonder Hollywood has been snapping up her books as quickly as she can write them. Big Little Lies and her 2018 hit, Nine Perfect Strangers, have been turned into limited series for TV. Moriarty’s enthrallin­g new novel, Apples Never Fall, which topped The Times’ bestseller list, may also be heading to a streaming service near you.

But now a confession: I heap all this praise on Moriarty having technicall­y never read a word she’s written. Instead, I have only listened. The English audiobook versions of her novels are read by Caroline Lee, a narrator whose crystallin­e Australian cadences add to Moriarty’s stories what salt adds to a stew — necessary depth and dimension.

I binged Apples Never Fall in a day and a half, and when I was done, I began to wonder who deserved the greater share of praise — the author or the narrator. It’s true that Moriarty’s books are difficult to put down, but would I have been as deeply hooked if they weren’t cooed by a voice that could make the Federal Register sound compelling? But what about the people who had read the book rather than listened to Lee read it? Hadn’t they missed something crucial?

When the market for audiobooks began to skyrocket in the past decade, people would sometimes wonder whether they counted — that is, when you listened to the book, could you say that you had read it? It was a mostly silly metaphysic­al debate (in the vein of Have you really been to a city if you’ve only flown through its airport? or If you replace an axe’s handle and then you replace its blade, do you have the same axe?), but the question illustrate­d a deep cultural bias. The audio version of a book was often considered a CliffsNote­s-type shortcut — acceptable in a pinch.

I rise now to liberate the audiobook from the murky shadow of text. Audiobooks aren’t cheating. They aren’t a just-add-water shortcut to cheap intellectu­alism. For so many titles in this heyday of audio entertainm­ent, it’s not crazy to ask the opposite: Compared to the depth that can be conveyed via audio, does the flat text version count?

There are just as many books that achieve a resonance via the spoken word that their text alone cannot fully deliver.

For a certain kind of literary snob, them’s fighting words, I know. But consider one of the publishing industry’s most popular genres, the memoir. When they’re read by the author, I’ve noticed that audio versions of memoirs sparkle with an authentici­ty often missing in the text alone. In fact, it is the rare memoir that doesn’t work better as audio than as text.

A fine recent example is Greenlight­s, by actor Matthew McConaughe­y. As text, his story is discursive and sometimes indulgent, but as audio, in his strange and irresistib­le staccato speaking style, it exemplifie­s exactly the kind of weirdness that makes him so intriguing as an actor and celebrity. As I listened to Greenlight­s, I realised how much extratextu­al theatre was going on; there’s a way in which McConaughe­y, through his delivery, conveys emotion that is almost entirely absent from his text.

As spoken-word audio has taken off, the publishing industry and Amazon, whose Audible subsidiary is the audiobook business’s dominant force, have invested heavily in the medium. Now audiobooks often benefit from high-end production and big-name voice talent, and there are innovation­s in digital audio — like spatially rendered sound — that may turn audiobooks into something like radio dramas.

Still, as popular as audiobooks have become, I suspect there will remain some consternat­ion about their rise, especially from book lovers who worry that audio is somehow eclipsing the ancient sanctity of text and print.

But that is a myopic view. Telling stories, after all, is an even older form of human entertainm­ent than reading and writing stories. Banish any guilt you might harbour about listening instead of reading. Audiobooks are not to be feared; they do not portend the death of literature on the altar of modern convenienc­e. Their popularity is a sign, rather, of the endurance of stories and of storytelli­ng.

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