Tagged: audiobook

Audiobook Review: The Boy Who Was Raised As a Dog

The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog: And Other Stories from a Child Psychiatrist’s Notebook
by Bruce D. Perry (Author), Maia Szalavitz (Author), Danny Campbell (Narrator)

This book was so fascinating that I dropped all my other podcasts and shows in order to listen to nothing but it from start to finish. I consistently found myself rewinding to catch things I’d missed. Everyone that’s seen me in the last 3 days has heard about this book. It is because of my own personal experience with childhood trauma that “The Boy Who Was Raised As A Dog” caught my eye, but you don’t have to have a history of abuse in order to find Dr. Perry and his work as compelling as I did.

This book is relevant to anyone who was ever a child and anyone who plans to raise children. Perry’s simple explanations, and memorable associations really helped me grasp the subject matter. For example, your developing brain is built like a thumbs-down fist, each finger matures at a different rate and requires different stimuli. After making this association, Perry would refer to the “fingers” of the brain throughout the book, helping me to visualize his subject.

The stories of these amazing children are riveting, and touching, and illuminating. From what I had previously thought I’d known about the brain, I was worried that the book would be little more than a freak show of irreparably damaged children and eventually adults, touched by the bony finger of neglect; disfigured mentally and physically by their relatively brief early trauma for the remaining years of their difficult and joyless lives. Fortunately, I was wrong about the brain. It seems that, while there are some things a person can’t retrieve from the jaws of serious damage, the brain will work to repair its self, and with proper stimulation, recover almost miraculously.

Perry talks about coming into the field of child psychology at a time when the official psychiatric belief was that children don’t suffer from trauma. If a child was molested, abused, or experienced the death of a parent, any significant change in behavior after that was considered to be purely coincidental.

As a child of the eighties, I came of age with the backlash from that incorrect assumption. The message I got growing up was that people who suffered abuse as children have been irreparably damaged. Forever broken on a foundational level, childhood trauma sufferers were doomed to a life of degradation.

A lot of people who find themselves in abusive relationships, or who have a history of abuse rewrite their stories rather than admit that they’re “that kind of person.” Violence, neglect and molestation don’t have a “type.” Childhood trauma has happened to every different kind of kid, with every different type of personality and in every different sort of home in the world. If you are currently living in fear for your safety, or if you ever have, you’re that “type.” I’m that type.

What I like about “The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog” is that it highlights just how much recovery the brain can make. It sends a clear message to and for those of us who felt that we would always be broken: the brain is amazing, your brain is amazing. Extreme childhood abuse and neglect has clearly left it’s mark on these children, and yet many of them make wonderful recoveries and are able to have and create the kind of social network that sustains mental health over time.

Dr. Perry confirmed something that I have long suspected on my own. Being in a 12 step program has shown me that massive recovery is possible with the right input and a strong social network. Human beings are amazing, and nothing can keep you down if you don’t want to be down. Damage takes time to repair, but nobody can break you if you get the help you need, and make the choice to not be broken.

Audiobook Review: Monster Hunter International

Monster Hunter International [Unabridged] [Audible Audio Edition]
by Larry Correia (Author), Oliver Wyman (Narrator)

Imagine every one of your favorite action movies ever combined into the best bedtime story ever, told to you as an excited child by the best storyteller dad ever and you’ll get a fairly good idea of what it’s like to listen to Oliver Wyman narrate Larry Correia’s “Monster Hunter International.”

Gorilla sized prize fighter, sharp shooter, and genius Owen Pit has a destiny, a destiny he is failing to fulfill by working late hours in an accounting department with a shit for brains middle-management slug of a boss who treats everyone poorly and acts like a tool. Thankfully destiny is the kind of thing that will come to you, especially if you’re the protagonist in a fantasy book; and brutally killing your werewolf boss in hand to hand combat opens a lot of doors for a young accountant when Monster Hunter International is on the scene.

Me listening to this book is the result of yet another one of Audible’s seemingly unending (thankfully unending) special sales. This one was for series starting books. If it wasn’t for this sale, I probably would have gone my whole life without this book, and that would have been a God damned shame. Because this book is two things I have grown to greatly appreciate in audiobooks. First, it is extremely well narrated. Second, it is 23 hours long and only costs 1 credit. Because of the audible sale, I paid real money for it (about $5), but I intend to buy books 2 and 3 with my audible credits. That gets me 20 and 18 respective hours of entertainment for the same price I pay for other books that are only 9 or 10 hours long.

I’m not saying that the hours to credits ratio is the main selling point, just that it’s a pretty bow on an already well wrapped package, if you know what I mean. Let’s put it this way: I don’t know if Larry Correia writes “BOOM!” when the hero Owen Pit shoots his gun, or if Oliver Wyman just gets excited and yells “BOOM!” but I don’t give a shit, because I love to hear a grown man say “Boom!” Especially Oliver Wyman.

The voice on this guy is amazing! There’s a reason Wyman has won fourteen Earphone Awards, five Audie Awards, two Listen Up Awards and narrated over 150 audiobooks. Other narrators I’ve listened to have about 3 unique character voices for the main character, their BFF and their love interest, and they tend to make every foreigner a Russian. Wyman had a unique character voice and tone for every one of the extensive cast that populate the Monster Hunter world. I was enrapt from first word to last. I’ve even created a new list of books I want based solely on the fact that Oliver Wyman has narrated them.

This book is packed with fun, and specially made for people who love guns. I’m not really interested in firearms, so some of the dick-hard descriptions of different guns and custom mods went completely over my head. Thankfully, the descriptions of guns was well and properly balanced with the shooting of guns, which I rather do enjoy.

If you have trouble with willful suspension of disbelief, this book is not for you. Not only does it have every single 80′s action movie cliche I ever heard of, but there are some I never even imagined before. I ate it up, and because there’s 23 awesome hours of it, I could listen and listen and there was still more to listen to! If you are the kind of person who clapped their hands and smiled like a hungry baby at feeding time whenever Mel Gibson took off running after a car traveling full speed down the freeway in a Lethal Weapon movie, this is your book and it’s calling your name. Don’t deny it. Embrace it. Be who you are, this is your destiny.

Audio Book Review: The Drunkards Walk

The Drunkard’s Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives
[Unabridged] [Audible Audio Edition]
Leonard Mlodinow (Author), Sean Pratt (Narrator)

Every so often, generally when I spend all my credits before the month is over, Audible will let me in on a super-secret fire sale made special just for me. I get to pick one book out of a page of ten that I can pay $4.95 for. Generally there’s the same cast of characters, give or take a book or two, and excluding books I’ve already bought at the sale. So last time I got the first Sookie Stackhouse book (and developed an unnatural obsession with that series for a bit), but I’d had my mind on “The Drunkard’s Walk” for a while. I wasn’t really sure what it was about, but I like the idea of randomness being a factor in my life. I mean, I know that randomness is a factor in my life, I just liked that someone had taken the time to write a book about it.

Initially, this book sounds very much like self-help, and at first I was worried I’d made the wrong choice. But as I listened further, the tone went from didactic to witty in the first 5 minutes, and continued in that favorable vein for the remainder.

The out of place introduction made me think of nervous publishers worrying that no one would buy a casual reader on probability unless they thought they could personally gain from the experience, so they had Leonard Mlodinow tack the self-help talk onto the front to draw in the the audience.

Not that listening to this book wont help you in your life (that outcome is very much up to you) just that if it doesn’t, you’ll still get quite a lot from it. I’m pretty terrible at math, mostly because I have a serious problem comprehending numbers. As you might expect from a book about probability, there are some fairly daunting number situations, at least for a dyscalculiac like myself. But Mlodinow uses simple terms and multiple real-life examples, illustrating complex mathematical concepts in vibrant color. If high school math had been like this, I probably would have had a much better time of it, but one course would have taken two years. He really goes into careful detail in explaining each concept.

As good as he is at explaining probability, what really makes this book into a compelling read is the artful storytelling that goes on throughout. The stories of the men and women who contributed to the development and continued use of probability throughout history are paired with anecdotes from our cultural history as well as the author’s own personal experience. Mlodinow shares himself with his reader. Whether its a humorous anecdote about the hidden cost of a crooked driveway, or the devastating lessons learned by his Holocaust survivor parents, the language is genuine and familiar.

Everything is pulled together by the narration of Sean Pratt who navigates equations, number strings and touching personal stories with almost perfect conversational cadence. I found myself wanting to hear what he had to say, wanting to follow along with the concepts because his tone was interesting and intelligent. Through Pratt, the subtle humor in the book really comes alive.

Overall, I think that “The Drunkard’s Walk” has reached the perfect balance a casual non-fiction book should aspire to. It is not so fact heavy that it becomes dry, and it is not so story focused that the subject is lost. In reaching this balance I’d say that Mlodinow surpasses other popular nonfiction writers like Mary Roach and Bill Bryson. Would I have bought this book had it not been on sale? Probably not. But for just under $5, it’s a great way to spend 9 hours and 19 minutes and come out smarter for it on the other side. I enjoyed myself, and I think that someone who understands numbers (or who can at least keep them straight in their head, unlike me) would really get a lot more out of it than I did.