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Ms M.

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Absolutely loved this unexpected find/

Overall
5 out of 5 stars
Performance
5 out of 5 stars
Story
5 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 28-08-24

This thorough study of Verdi's life & music I found absolutely fascinating and very rewarding to listen to. The man, his music, his passions, his environs and the age he lived in brought to life. Enjoyed enormously the references & asides to americana & in the american vernacular - many of which I did not know exactly what the allusion was to but you could get the modern day sense of it. Was it forms of torture?- an English sense of humour - laughed out loud.

I've read the critical reviews and the accusations contained in some of them and would say just go with the flow of this wonderful, humanising, affectionate and comprehensive narrative on the life & times of, what I now know after listening to this hugely enjoyable "biography", was a truly great composer and, what's more, a fascinating multi layered human being.

I'm now off to listen to everything Robert Greenberg as to say about music. Thank you Robert for doing what you do.

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Fascinating, literate debunking of a glamour myth

Overall
5 out of 5 stars
Performance
5 out of 5 stars
Story
5 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 14-06-24

I'm so glad Audible brought this audio book to my attention. Un put downable - whatever that means in audio book terms. Have learned a lot about the "history" of a time I partly lived through. Thank you Roger Lewis for this mammouth undertaking.

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A life enhancing book.

Overall
5 out of 5 stars
Performance
5 out of 5 stars
Story
5 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 15-01-23

Picked this up rather randomly having listened to the author's book on Crispr. Will now have to listen to all of his books. A fascinating story so well & sympathetically told. I was skeptical about the choice of narrator but in the end the narrator seemed to me to be Walter Isaacson. Thank you Walter for writing this book and the accompanying pdf enriched the story so much.

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Contrary to other reviewers!

Overall
5 out of 5 stars
Performance
5 out of 5 stars
Story
5 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 23-01-21

I love the sound of Bill Bryson's voice and loved this book. I wish he would narrate more of his books. I've a biochemistry background so a number of things I knew, but many I didn't and was grateful to be expertly & gently informed by Bill who IMHO a great commuicator. I don't think this book was a place for humour anyway but the many ironic asides were much appreciated. The role of big pharma in the lives of doctors, and by definition us, was gently and expertly handled without needing too much arithmetic to back it up I have listened to William Roberts and don't find him to be Bill's voice, which is a lovely transatlantic burr.

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A wake up call - if we chose to wake up.

Overall
5 out of 5 stars
Performance
5 out of 5 stars
Story
5 out of 5 stars

Reviewed: 07-09-18

A wake up call - if we chose to wake up to our ongoing eradication of non human nature. The hardback has been sitting on our coffee table for a while now, with many recommendations. Heard Mark Cocker's talk, on the book, at the Bird Fair and then saw the audio format and bought it straight away knowing that Mark Cocker was the only person to read it. Such elegant, but distressing, writing/listening with one highly quotable phrase following another. The "fallacy of conservation" "we place no value on non-human nature" and "at every turn in the road we chose ourselves". On historical examples - "we knew then, and we know better now, and we continue to destroy non man made nature". We live in the countryside and so are aware of the myth of conservation in intensive agriculture, intensive forestry and all our other "inputs" that continue to destroy the natural environment. Mid Wales, and it's 7,000,000 "free range" hens, is probably seen by the analytical satellites as turning into the ammonia capital of Europe. I'm sure Mark Cocker won't agree me with this, but we see wind farm companies imposing significant destruction of the uplands the peat and the wildlife "in our name" . He shows us that, as we know from history, that we live now in the way we have always lived. Trying to imagine how to get his story to a wider public to make more of us realise the damage that we, sometimes unconsciously, do with all our "stuff" is a challenge that should be taken up.

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