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Laura's avatar

I originally read this series, probably 30 years ago. I Listened to it on cassette tapes! During the summer when I take my long bike rides and love to listen to audiobooks all day long, I’ve pulled out Mrs Pollifax again by Dorothy Gilman. I love the way she writes the characters, the language that she uses, the actual conversations that people have without all the abbreviations or inferred text. The tenacity of Mrs. Pollifax and all the crazy situation she gets herself into. They have stood the test of time over the last 30 years in our world that hasn’t changed that much. Mrs Pollifax does not have a cell phone, there is no social media, and the world is a little more of a secret then what it is today. Maybe I’m showing my age but I like that.

Dorothy Gilman has written some standalone novels. My favorites are Caravan and her memoir A New Kind of Country.

I too am a fan of Three Pines and the Silva books. I’m looking forward to the new book. It’s hard when we get a new reader, but the stories are so great it’s not too hard to get past that.

Aren’t we lucky to be book lovers?! Books are my constant companion and especially audiobooks. They keep me company through the day. Thanks for sharing your love of books too!

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Marie A Bailey's avatar

Gosh, Sandi, I wrote a long comment yesterday and must have inadvertently deleted it 🙄 I had wrote that I was enjoying the comments here as much as your post and now I have new authors on my audiobooks wish list. Thank you for that! I tend to burn through audiobooks since I enjoy listening while walking, knitting or weaving, housecleaning, and cooking. I recommend Sulari Gentill. She has a series set in 1930s Australia starting with A Few Right Thinking Men, and she also has a few standalone novels (The Woman in the Library for one). I also enjoy Louise Penny’s series. I was devastated when Ralph Cosham died. For me, he was Gamache and I could not imagine any other narrator. I haven’t been happy with Robert Bathurst at all. I forget which novel it was but he was (to my ears) so caricaturist in his narration that I thought I’d have to switch to reading the print books. Bathurst’s accent didn’t bother me; rather, I didn’t hear any sympathy in his voice for the characters. So I’m looking forward to a new narrator with The Grey Wolf. By the way, Cosham is the narrator for Timothy Snyder’s book Blood Lines. That was a difficult book to get through (all the horrors of Russia and Germany’s quest for land and power), but Cosham’s calm, soft voice made it possible. And lovely vest!

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