The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

3 books worth giving a listen

Great narrators make these easy on the ears.

- By Katherine A. Powers Special To The Washington Post

In these new audiobooks, great tales are matched with great narrators.

‘Agent Running in the Field’

John le Carré, master of espionage and gifted voice actor, gives an outstandin­g performanc­e narrating his 25th novel, a spy thriller set in England’s torrid summer of 2018. As Brexit and a visit from the American president create havoc, spy handler Nat has been relegated to heading British intelligen­ce service’s substation for has-beens and screw-ups called “Haven.” Nat, a champion badminton player, is challenged to a match by a young man named Ed, another of le Carré’s

passionate­ly idealistic innocents.

One thing leads to another, and the rest of le Carré’s distinctiv­e ingredient­s come sifting in: queasy loyalties and disillusio­n, enemy agents’ unholy infatuatio­n with one another, and cynical, high-level scapegoati­ng. Cryptic, exciting, and witty in its portrayal of mannerisms, the novel is further enhanced by its

author’s delivery. His rich, woodwind baritone mutates effortless­ly into arrogant oldboy bray, industrial Midlands clunk and the brittle tones of “one of those upper-class girls who grew up with ponies.” The plot does execute a few improbable maneuvers, but that is more than compensate­d by the perfect unity between story and narrator. (Penguin Audio, Unabridged, 9-1/2 hours)

‘The Big Book of the Dead’

Marion Winik’s reminiscen­ces of dead family members, friends and occasional others is as much a memoir as it is a salute to those who have lived. There is sadness here but also humor and wit and an overall feeling of engagement with life. Set in New Jersey, Pennsylvan­ia, Texas, New Orleans and finally Baltimore, the 125 pieces evoke changes in social milieu and way of life, from Bohemianis­m and drug use to motherhood, widowhood and purpose.

Winik narrates the book herself in a bold, pleasantly low-pitched voice, her delivery exceptiona­lly expressive of the emotions her fine, concise writing conjures. Each person — and, in some cases, animal — is captured in an eloquent vignette, at times high spirited or melancholy and moving. Among her subjects are her mother, the golf champ; her first, much-loved husband, who lost his battle with AIDS; her stillborn baby; a philanderi­ng hookup (who actually may not be dead); Rocco, a cat; Leslie, a personable goldfish; and the man whose life taught her that it’s “necessary and gorgeous to be who you are”- which could be the central message of these marvelous portraits. (Tantor, Unabridged, 5 hours)

‘The Man That Got Away’

This is Lynne Truss’ second novel starring Constable

Twitten. It is summer 1957 in the English seaside town of Brighton and young Twitten has become a devotee of Nancy Mitford’s “Noblesse Oblige,” in which the elements of “U” (upper-class) and “Non-U” (not upper-class) locutions were set before a class-obsessed English public. Twitten insists, unheeded, that the book could be a valuable forensic tool in identifyin­g criminals — and so it turns out to be. But that vindicatio­n comes long after the madcap plot has wended its way through the town’s seedier holiday attraction­s and bumped up against a ragtag selection of miscreants, among the police-station charlady and “criminal mastermind,” Mrs. Groynes.

Matt Green narrates this deft caper with a fine selection of voices and infectious enthusiasm for its many about-turns. He sounds as baffled as we are by where this is all heading — and as pleased, too, when we find that a group of supposed musicians are, unknown to each other, operatives from Interpol, New Scotland Yard, MI5, Brighton Police and Mrs. Groynes’ gang. (Lamplight Audiobooks, Unabridged, 7-1/2 hours)

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