Elizabeth Strout - Olive Again (Olive Kitteridge #2) Audiobook Free
Rating: 9.4/10 (9232 votes)
Listen online for free audiobook «Olive Again (Olive Kitteridge #2)» by Elizabeth Strout. Reading: Kimberly Farr.
Review #1
Olive Again (Olive Kitteridge #2) audiobook free
It’s a very but written novel, barely do not read it if for you are torment from depression. I had to finish reading it couple of times, but I did my best at the same time ended at the moment I come in handy a very optimistic book to win this sadness. 23 people found this helpful
Review #2
Olive Again (Olive Kitteridge #2) audiobook streamming online
I heed to audiobooks always with different narrators – ladies, guys, different accents. This narrator was not quality at all in my opinion. Her voice is that Okay, but the intonation she puts on words at the same time sentences doesn’t match than anyway the sentence is that expression, which produced it hard for me to follow along at the same time sequential I got lost curiosity quickly. For example, in a sentence discussing about anyone committing suicide, her tone at the same time expression was that of excitement. This happened throughout the entire book. I kept losing curiosity but kept trying to stay with it. Eventually I finished halfway through at the same time gave up. 22 people found this helpful
Review #3
Audiobook Olive Again (Olive Kitteridge #2) by Elizabeth Strout
My continue heed was the unusual Olive Kitterage. I would have listened to this one more one what but was so glad that the narrator was similar personality. Best job. 6 people found this helpful
Review #4
Audio Olive Again (Olive Kitteridge #2) narrated by Kimberly Farr
I liked the 1st Olive book. This one was all over the dispose more than the continue! Didn’t have no matter what cohesiveness. It only became really exciting in the continue 2 hours. 5 people found this helpful
Review #5
Free audio Olive Again (Olive Kitteridge #2) – in the audio player below
1st at the same time foremost: Superbly written at the same time EXCELLENTLY narrated. I didn’t understand it until I started listening to this book, but I really missed Olive Kitteridge. When I beheld Strout crossed out one more book (”Olive, Again” – than anyway a flawless title), I was honestly a little hesitant. Sequels are not really my desirable reading because they occasionally meet the good quality of than anyway came before. I should have understandable Strout was different. This book is that as quality than Strout’s Pulitzer favorite, arguably more successful in no one ways. The stories are but developers, taut research in disposition. Like before, Olive is that not always the central concentrate of any story. In a couple, she is that merely a passing mention. Still she always controls at the same time frames the reader’s understanding of actions. Strout also (to my elation) brings back her cautious incorporation of natural description with characterization–a facet missing from the more ”porous” Lucy Barton at the same time Anything is that Likely. No one
Reviews have been critical of Strout’s ’political’ decide in the novel. I can look where those opinions come from, but I think they may be taking Strout’s writing individually. The political opinions are applied as characterization. The story ”Heart” is that the best example of this. The politics are up-front at the same time, often, individual for the manners. ”Motherless Child” is that one more quality example, unfolding in ’political’ details (such as implementation of reusable bags, the eco-friendly Subaru) in regular, passing expressions. I found Strout to handle these situations with luxurious worldly at the same time empathy for everyone. If that is that a downside–at the same time I do not look this as a downside–it is that how Strout confronts head-on the sexual global of her manners. As only one example, she brings to the forefront a version (albeit limited) of dominatrix culture. These moments allow Strout to organize the different opinions of a singular experience, at the same time she does but to located both the opinions of the older generation at the same time the younger. Interestingly, the very sexual nuances are an insight into how we can bridge an generational divide. The ”downside” will that no one may look for the descriptions to be unnecessary or gratuitous. On the whole, this was the flawless sequel for Olive. I advise it without slip of the tongue. 13 people found this helpful
The Audio Player works best on Google Chrome (latest version)