Friday, November 29, 2019

Some Reviews of Several Audible Originals


            A Couple months ago I did 10 quick reviews for audio books I had been listening to on Audible.  But I specifically left out something else Audible offers, their original content.  Audible produces numerous books in their own studios and has moved into producing more and more podcast-like content.  To help showcase more of this material they allow audible members to get 2 titles in this category each month (mind you it is from a list of 6 showcased items, not the whole shebang).
            I see this content as standing apart from the audible books as they frequently have numerous cast members, sound effects, audio taken from news reports and other sources.  They are so different in execution and production (most of the time) that I wouldn’t call them audio books… more like audio productions.  So I am going to pull out a couple of these and say whether I liked them.


            A Native Alaskan man deeply troubled by alcohol and personal instability disappears into the wilderness after fleeing an escalating violent confrontation outside of his mother’s home.  His behavior and his explanation of where he was and what he was doing in the days that followed lead to questions about Native Alaskan Folklore.
This is exactly the sort of content I come to expect from Audible originals when it comes to the true crime genre.  A seemingly straight forward case that happens in a unique location with a colorful assortment of real people, with the additional twist of explaining/exploring something I was previously unaware of, in this case the Native Alaskan folklore of the Iñukuns.  For lack of a better explanation, the Iñukuns are the folktale of a lost tribe of small and strong people that still live in the wild… and fuck with people.  It is spooky.


If I have one complaint it is that I would have liked to learn more about the Native Folklore.  I am a mythology nerd and I will admit that Native American myths are blindspot for me.  And sadly this material is obscure enough that I couldn't really find too much else related to the Iñukuns after finishing.  Maybe that is a strength to this?  Leave them wanting more?
I see a lot of reviewers on the Audible site itself complaining about swearing... which is just so stupid.  Like, this is a violent crimes investigation taking place in a rural and blue-collar community... People say "fuck".  Grow up and get over it.
I gave it a 5/5.

            This series takes in massive amounts of interviews and oral history to look at the evolving social justice movements and economic realities of the Homefront during World War II.
            I will freely admit that I am Reeeeaaalllll tired of learning about World War II.  Along with Viet Nam it has been in the popular consciousness during the entirety of my life and I just do not want to know any more about the war itself.  When I saw this thing I mostly got it on the strength of, “I like Martin Sheen” and “well it is less about the war and instead about the Homefront” and “it isn’t just a rosy circle jerk for America”  These factors taken together switched my mood on the thing.


            It is a good original take on the subject matter.  It is cool to learn about how race, gender, and economics were shaped by the war in much stranger ways than would have been expected.  The idea that the government had to ask for companies to build them a tank and being told, “Sure we can do that, but just one thing, what is a tank?”  That is interesting.
            My real complaint is this: It is AGGRESSIVELY a series.  Each section starts with a recap and introduction and ends with preview and credits.  That is stupid.  The whole thing should have been reedited to make a comprehensive credits section at the end of the whole thing, no previews, no recaps, just get into it.  I should not be skipping dozens of minutes to get past these redundancies.  Major drag on the production.
            If not for the need of a reedit this would be a 5/5, as is, I gave it a 4/5

            The story of a woman whose children were stolen from her by their father and taken to who knows where and why she didn’t look for them.
            This is a sad and miserable exploration of a tragic family manipulated by a guy who in any just universe would have been murdered at a much younger age.
            I did not like this.  It is just sad and frustrating.  I don’t feel like I learned anything from going thru this and I would not recommend it.
            I guess if you like misery porn this would be for you.
            This is a 2/5.

            A man is in prison for the murder(?) of the woman he was having an affair with.  There is not a single piece of forensic evidence that he committed the crime… There isn’t even a body of the victim.  She is just gone.
            This is one of those real-life cases where they do the thing of, “Here is the case against him” portrayed as solid as possible, and then then in the second half they explain why all of that is basically junk.  And since I am all about the, “Show me the fingerprints and the blood splatter” I thought the first half was shockingly thin, so by the time they started laying out why he was innocent I mostly was nodding and going, “Yeah”.


            This is (to me) very much the story of some guy getting a crime pinned on him, and how the Scottish criminal justice system is deeply flawed.  But then I look at other reviewers and they seem to take the, “This is biased toward innocence” and I guess it is more up in the air than I thought.
            This is a 5/5 for me.

            A look at the scientist who championed Lunar Orbit Rendezvous, the dark horse method of space craft construction and operation that allowed a smaller craft and crew to visit the moon and return safely to earth before the end of the 1960’s.
            I was surprised how much I enjoyed this.  It is a good blend of history and science that I wouldn’t mind seeing in other similar historical instances (maybe the Manhattan Project or the creation of the Windows/Apple operating systems).
            If you like learning about the history of science, I cannot think of a reason why you would dislike listening to this.
            I put this at 4/5.


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