
Office of the Dead
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Buy Now for £16.99
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Narrated by:
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June Barrie
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By:
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Andrew Taylor
About this listen
Critic reviews
Slowly a mystery emerges
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Brilliant!
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Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
The author Andrew Taylor is in his mid sixties, which is why he understands perfectly the era of the fifties. I am the same age and can appreciate his novel which is superbly written. The narrator June Barrie was perfect. I was transported. Not sure if today's younger reader will appreciate this. But I do.What other book might you compare Office of the Dead to, and why?
There are too many wonderful novels. I am about to read the next book the Judgement of Strangers, which is the middle novel of the Roth trilogy. It sounds very promising.Have you listened to any of June Barrie’s other performances? How does this one compare?
She's not a prolific narrator, but I'm hugely impressed with this reading. I'm staying in rural China where there are no westerners, and it gave me hours of joy to be reminded of England and the spoken word.If you made a film of this book, what would be the tag line be?
This has been made into a television series. In my opinion, Audible should rethink this rather meaningless question and delete it.Any additional comments?
This is my second review in three years of listening, and only because I think the author and narrator deserves the praise, as they have given me so much pleasure. And I hope it gains a wider audience.QUALITY FIFTIES NOSTALGIA & MYSTERY
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Entertainingly dark
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If it were the last then perhaps the purpose of this book is for answers to the mysteries in the previous books to drop into place. Perhaps those reading it as the third book in the trilogy are constantly emitting sighs of satisfaction as they say to themselves "Ah, that's the reason why that other thing happened in book 1 or 2".
I read it first and found it extremely slow and lacking any tension or narrative drive. For the first 80% of the book, nothing really happens. The narrator stumbles across a couple of unexplained facts, but so what? The narrator is a dispassionate observer with no skin in the game and the author gives us no real mystery to drive the story forward.
As a standalone book, this doesn't work. Perhaps it does in the context of the trilogy.
The narration is excellently and convincingly done.
A story devoid of tension, pace or narrative drive
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The narrator was perfect for 1950’s story
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Andrew Taylor has a gift of drawing me in.
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Enjoyable, well written and different.
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