Raw by Scott Monk, read by David Tredinnick
Brett Dalton is in trouble. He’s an angry young man, with a dangerous temper and no future. When a magistrate sentences him to three months at ‘The Farm’ for a break-and-enter, Brett is given the time, and support, to evaluate his life and learn painful lessons about friendship, trust, love, and loss. Monk’s engaging tale provides his readers with didactic elements on conflict resolution, and coping strategies that don’t involve using your fists.
Published 28 February, 2005
Raw (Scott Monk, read by David Tredinnick, Bolinda, $44.95 cd, ISBN 1740948270) ***
Brett Dalton is in trouble. He’s an angry young man, with a dangerous temper and no future. When a magistrate sentences him to three months at ‘The Farm’ for a break-and-enter, Brett is given the time, and support, to evaluate his life and learn painful lessons about friendship, trust, love, and loss. Monk’s engaging tale provides his readers with didactic elements on conflict resolution, and coping strategies that don’t involve using your fists. His minor characters serve to assist Brett on his journey of self discovery rather than providing any tangents to the redemption narrative. Narrator David Tredinnick brings the story to life with an ease and mood that captures both the setting and the pace of the novel. His delivery is measured, allowing the readers to access Brett’s development and eventual resolution. A popular novel with teenage boys, the CD version is presented in seven discs, which have been broken down into five-minute chunks allowing for easy bookmarking. One reservation was that my factory-fitted car CD player refused to read the discs, so it’s worth ensuring readers have the hardware to play the novel. Tredinnick won an Adult Narrator of the Year Award in 1998 and 1999 for his readings of Little White Secrets by Catherine Jinks and Silences Long Gone by Anson Cameron. In 2001 he won a Sanderson Young Adult Narrator of the Year Award for his reading of Max by Michael Hyde.Ben Beaton is a writer and teacher in Perth
This review from Australian Bookseller & Publisher magazine is reproduced by kind permission of Thorpe-Bowker, a division of R R Bowker LLC. © Copyright 2004, Thorpe-Bowker


Share on Facebook
Add to Technorati Favorites
Stumble it!
Maelstrom by Michael MacConnell, read by Sean ManganRelentless action marks this debut action thriller set in Boston and the US east coast. Harry Reilly, retired from active FBI duty, believes that a copycat killer is working in the shadows of other serial killers. 10 January, 2008
Turner’s Paintbox by Paul Morgan, read by Humphrey BowerPaul Morgan’s first novel The Pelagius Book drew comparisons from some reviewers to the work of David Malouf. His second, Turner’s Paintbox, published earlier this year by Viking, is a more conventional story set in contemporary Sydney. Gerard Moyne is an art consultant who is on a steady trajectory to international success and wealth. 10 January, 2008
Audio Book ReviewsIt is a thing of ‘moocow’ innocence, with childish thought and memory tenderly evoked. It is also a thing of great hunger for personal identity. Stephen Dedalus, the central character of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, visualises himself in terms of the world … the universe. Boundaries between himself and the greatness of everything are sought, defined and expressed with ever-increasing hunger for the knowledge of beauty, art and meaning. James Joyce’s remarkable semi-autobiographical novel is truly a great (and very accessible) work of literature, and its beautifully layered and lyrical quality is ideally realised in audio form. 27 October, 2006
Audio Book: Ice Station by Matthew Reilly, read by Sean ManganI suppose it’s appropriate for Reilly’s adventure, set in a US-run scientific base in Antarctica, to be read in an American (actually, a Canadian) accent. Nonetheless, it’s initially a little off-putting for an Australian production of an Australian novel. Sean Mangan’s reading is well-paced, if a little flat and ‘radio announcer’ in tone at first. 20 July, 2005
Audio Book: Are We There Yet? A Journey Around Australia by Alison Lester, read by Genevieve MooyAn audio version of a picture book about a family’s journey around Australia is just the thing to have in the car. At 20 minutes running time Grace’s recount of a special year, when she and brothers Luke and Billy ‘missed school for the whole winter term’ to travel around Australia with Mum and Dad, might last to the supermarket rather than across the Nullabor but the imaginative and creative possibilities of the audio package could be lifelong. 20 July, 2005
Audio Book: Hating Alison Ashley by Robin Klein, read by Felicity PriceErica Yurken—or ‘Yuk’, ‘Gherkin’ or ‘Erk’ to most of her peers, family and teachers—is convinced she is on her way to greatness. She survives the challenges of life at the ‘disadvantaged’ Barringa East Primary School, by having a fertile imagination and a precocious belief that she is in every way superior to all those around her. But then Alison Ashley arrives. 20 July, 2005
Audio Book: A Series of Unfortunate Events: The Grim Grotto, read by Tim CurryThe mystery and quirkiness that has made the print version of ‘A Series of Unfortunate Events’ so successful has been lovingly recreated and enhanced in this compact disc version of the 11th book. There is a lot to like about a dust jacket that warns you not to listen to the audio book, as the contents are both horrible and distressing. Those brave enough to place the CD into their stereo will be comforted to know that the intricacies of phenomenon known as the ‘Water Cycle’ have been carefully catalogued by Mr Snicket, so as to not delve into the despair of the Baudelaire orphans too early in the narrative. 20 July, 2005
Audio Book: Thumbelina and Other Fairy Tales by Hans Christian Andersen, various narratorsA good fairy tale is a splendid thing, richly decorated and as deceptively simple as a snowflake, crystal-woven with glittering images of sweetness and melancholy-edged gladness, immortal in its joyous appeal. The best writers of fairy tales can without exaggeration be called geniuses—and they don’t come better than Hans Christian Andersen. 20 July, 2005
Audio Book: Toad Rage, written and read by Morris GleitzmanMorris Gleitzman was a perfect (and obvious) choice of reader for his book Toad Rage in audio format. In this unabridged adventure, listeners are treated to the fast-paced life of Limpy the cane toad and his endeavour to answer the question that plagues his mind and drives his mission—why do humans hate toads? Limpy, sick of being the local public enemy and watching his relatives through get run over by bloodthirsty truck drivers, decides to leave his family and travel Queensland to try to change all the toad-hating minds. 20 July, 2005
Audio Book News...Got a few hours to spare? Why not curl up with a good novel on audio? Even if time is tight, the great majority of audio books have chapter breaks so you can stop and come back to where you left off. 19 July, 2005
|
Add a Comment
Please be civil.