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Beloved
- Narrated by: Toni Morrison
- Length: 12 hrs and 3 mins
- Unabridged Audiobook
- Categories: Literature & Fiction, Genre Fiction
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Dont be put off by the other reviews!
- By Siobhan on 26-10-17
Summary
Staring unflinchingly into the abyss of slavery, this spellbinding novel transforms history into a story as powerful as Exodus and as intimate as a lullaby. Sethe, its protagonist, was born a slave and escaped to Ohio, but 18 years later she is still not free. She has too many memories of Sweet Home, the beautiful farm where so many hideous things happened. And Sethe's new home is haunted by the ghost of her baby, who died nameless and whose tombstone is engraved with a single word: Beloved. Filled with bitter poetry and suspense as taut as a rope, Beloved is a towering achievement.
Toni Morrison is the Robert F. Goheen Professor of Humanities at Princeton University. She has received the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Pulitzer Prize. In 1993 she was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. She lives in Rockland County, New York, and Princeton, New Jersey.
Critic reviews
"A masterwork....Wonderful....I can't imagine American literature without it." ( Los Angeles Times)
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What listeners say about Beloved
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
- Deborah Richards
- 16-07-06
Astounding
The style, subject matter and structure of this book demanded a re-read; listening to it, after 3 attempts has transformed my understanding and appreciation of it. The author has an important 'voice' and hearing her read her own work is a potent experience in itself.
This book records slavery from the slave perspective. At times harrowing and frightening it is illuminating of the slave world and humanity in general. The characterisation is strong and meaningful and Morrison's use of included and deliberately excluded elements brings the reader to the heart of the tale and lives of the characters. The style and use of language is powerful, both difficult and confusing at times but the Audible edition almost eliminates these difficulties. Having 'read' this novel before I matched what I was hearing to the text and a real sense of dawning understanding overtook me.
Not a light listen but an incredibly important one, moving and life enhancing, it demands time and concentration; you might feel as though you'd like to give up: but perseverance and acceptance of the challenge will reward you. A truly truly a great book, made greater in this format.
Toni Morrison is a complex and contraversial writer and this her most gritty book would be a good starting choice; introducing all the themes of her writing. As long as the plight of the dispossessed and down trodden remain at the heart of our world Morrison enables the reader to understand what it is to have nothing to fall back on except raw human nature, good or evil - somewhere in this tale is a lesson for each of us, but Morrison leaves us to work out what.
Give this a go - it will not disappoint or fail to move you.
27 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Sophia
- 09-01-10
I was scared witless...
This has to rate as one of my top ten audio books of all time. It's always a treat to hear an author read her own work and this is no exception. The pathos that Morrison's diction lends to this exemplary text makes for a stunning dramatic recording. I was gripped throughout and had switch off on several occasions, because it was too frightening to go on. This is not billed as a thriller, and nor should it be. Rather it is a terrible story. It?s not a comfortable read, but it is outstanding: for what is said, and how.
7 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Jane P
- 23-05-11
Important subject but ...
Such an important subject but the style was not my cup of tea. This is a very personal reason not to like it and I can see why other reviewers raved about this book. If you like poetry, read in the stereotypical way, with pauses in unusual places and metaphors abounding then this may be for you. At times it felt like I was listening to a poem that was going on for hours and hours! I found the book hard to get into and stay connected with because of the reading style. The story depicts the harrowing nature of slavery and what humans, whatever their race or background, are capable of.
I give it three stars because I think it probably is a very well written book, covering a very difficult subject, but one that I could not appreciate because of the style of writing or reading.
20 people found this helpful
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- Strayficshion
- 16-03-20
I wish I could have liked this more
I feel quite churlish giving this a 2* rating; Beloved has the merit of pain and injustice, the language is beautiful and authentic, and the narrator's voice is like liquid gold. But I found it hard to keep my attention on the story, I drifted away quite often, and I lost track of where I was in it and who was who. Some of that is almost certainly due to Morrison's exquisite voice which is a sleep therapist's dream voice; but there was also the slightly odd pacing and rhythm she used which didn't really map onto the punctuation - little groups of four to five words then a gap whether or not a gap should actually be there - and a soporific monotonic style that almost never lifted or dropped or changed in any way. Sometimes when a narration seems to be a hindrance to my appreciation of the story I'll find another version and read it myself, but not always, and this was one of those.
4 people found this helpful
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- Ragne
- 25-09-20
Couldn't finish
I managed less than an hour. The narration stressed me out. She takes unnatural breaks several times each sentence, and all of those she gasps air.
I would love to hear or read it, I've heard so much good about it, but I just felt my blood pressure rise from her reading.
Gave the story 3 stars as I had to give it something, but I don't know what it deserves.
3 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 27-03-18
haunting and beautiful
It was such a treat to hear in the authors own voice. nothing quite like it!
3 people found this helpful
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- Jennifer
- 23-09-12
Bad narration
I know in theory it's great to have the author narrate but Toni Morrison unfortunately isn't cut out for it. Her voice is so low, husky and whispery and the inflection/emphasis is peculiar, I just can't finish it. Will be looking for a version with a different narrator or possibly reading the book instead!
10 people found this helpful
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- Annette Brazier
- 01-09-15
Haunting.
A deeply woven story. Both touching and moving. Great characterisation, leaving nothing uncovered, and laid bare, but the true nature of humankind.
2 people found this helpful
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- hellojoanie
- 10-10-21
This is a marmite book!
I read many reviews before purchasing this title. As a holder of white privilege I felt it was an important subject. So I listened and I tried to stick with it, I wanted to enjoy it. But at five hours from the end I almost gave up. At less that three hours I finally quit. I don't often give up on a book. But I this book just did not hold my interest. The author narrates but I did not find her easy to listen to. But more that that, I found the story hard to follow and make sense of. Was the character of Beloved a ghost? A real person? I still don't know. And I am not held by the story so I don't actually care.
1 person found this helpful
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- Jahred Ross
- 16-10-19
Read by the author
Beautifully narrated and written. A harrowing tale exploring the impact of slavery. A must read.
1 person found this helpful
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Overall

- Mimi
- 29-07-06
Perhaps best read on paper
Lyrical prose is woven into this story of a compelling period in our history. The story line is believable, and is an adept portrayal of how human beings can treat and react to each other. I believe I would have enjoyed this book much more if I had consumed it with my eyes instead of my ears. I missed the opportunity to go back a few pages to check a line or re-read a paragraph. The complexity of the story is at times like the quiet taste of a familiar herb in a vibrantly constructed meal - something you can't quite place, can't quite encompass on the first pass. I would recommend this book, with the reminder that other listeners may have the same problem maintaining grasp of the elusive thread. I've listened to several hundred books, and would place this in the top 50.
106 people found this helpful
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- Duke Silver
- 07-10-18
All the reviews are right, not a good Audiobook
She reads in a halted, slow, out of breath whisper. I had to speed it up to just make it bearable. The story is good but can get confusing, this is a book you should read and not listen to.
26 people found this helpful
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Overall

- Everett Leiter
- 11-07-06
You may not like this book.
Rated by the NY Times as the best American novel of the last 25 years, I decided to try *Beloved* by Toni Morrison. I had serious difficulty liking this book at first. It seemed to me that in the first hour or so of this book, the narrator *told* me how the characters felt. I thought, "Wouldn't it have been better to *show* me, rather than *tell* me?" I thought to myself, "Either Nobel Prize winning fiction is not what it used to be, or I am seriously deficient in my literary appreciation." I suspect that my own lack of appreciation was at fault, but I would be remiss if I did not mention that I frequently had difficulty staying awake, especially in the first half of this novel. "Suspense as taut as a rope," to quote the publisher, would not have been my tag for this book. Some friends told me, "Yes, Toni Morrison takes some getting used to." Others said, "Yes, I hear it's problematic to read. That's why I decided not to read it." Ultimately, I am very glad that I finished this book, because it had a powerful effect on me. The characters and the dilemmas they faced were fascinating and gripping. Be forewarned, however, that this novel requires active participation of the reader: it's some work to read it. The best way for me to describe it is to say that the novel contains a series of fragmentary episodes, often incompletely described. You, as the reader, have to try to piece together the events. There are abrupt shifts of time and place. Again, there is often no explicit guidance. The reader must infer where in time and place the narrative has jumped to. Perhaps, as a reader, I found it to be rather too arduous. However, in the last third or so of the novel, when all the pieces start coming together, the novel's accumulated effect was riveting. Now that I understand more about the novel's structure, I wonder whether I might enjoy re-reading (re-listening?) to it in a few years.
111 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 10-06-13
Toni Morrison....stick to writing..please!
Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?
Of course, Beloved is Brilliant! Just wish that the author wasn't the one reading this. Really hard to listen to. Very distracting.
13 people found this helpful
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- Golanka
- 09-06-16
Incredible novel; not so incredible narration
The novel itself is incredible and powerful. The style is Faulknerian, the feeling it provides is somehow mystical and extremely "real" at the same time.
This should be considered part of the American Canon, assuming there is one (and, I think it is!).
However.
While in theory it sounds good to have the author read her own work, Toni Morrison's narration has two major flaws:
1. She whispers. Not a major problem in-and-of-itself, but the volume of the recording is so low that it made it difficult to listen to while walking in the city (my usual activity while listening).
2. She doesn't have the breath to read some of the passages in the book. She had to pause in the middle of sentences to the point that the art of her prose, and sometimes even the meaning of her words was lost.
52 people found this helpful
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- Mockingbird
- 05-07-18
Authors reading their own books: not a good idea
This is probably my favorite novel of all. I was thrilled to find the author recording her own book. Alas, I simply cannot understand it. Oddly I have found that to be the same with several other books. Ms Morrison's reading is whispering and breathy. Going back to hard-copy...
10 people found this helpful
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- John R Williford
- 14-07-06
Author-read Books
I have just started listening to this book, and have decided that I will have to buy a printed copy and read its text concurrently while listening in order to make it to the end. This is the third audiobook I have purchased which is read aloud by its author, and it will be the last. I cannot understand Ms Morrison's pronunciation of many of the words. There is no differentiation in voice, so one doesn't know what character is talking or thinking. There are no pauses between the paragraphs or shifts in the time periods. [Contrast the amateurish reading of Beloved with the professionally read "The Sound and The Fury"--an even more diffcult book to follow.] Frankly, Ms Morrison is not a professional reader and subscribers are cautioned to listen to the sample [which I did not] before purchasing this audiobook. Unfortunately, Beloved is only available as an audiobook read by Ms Morrison. So readers of this review don't think I am picking on Toni Morrison, Charles Frazier's self-read of Cold Mountain suffers from the same deficiencies. Does any one know why the producers of audiobooks allow authors to read their own books? I will guess that it all has to do with retaining copyrights and royalties by the author and the author's agent.
127 people found this helpful
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- Kindle Customer
- 13-06-06
Great literature!
This is the most important work of fiction in the last 25 years—according to a recent NY Times survey. The audio book, read by the author, is the most powerful work I have ever listened too—and that is saying a lot. I am practically addicted to my headphones, my connection to the real world while the rest of my body lives in Costa Rica.
This is not entertainment; it is literature—something that changes you. It is original and disturbing. It will affect your dream life. If you are the kind of person who does not dream, you will not be interested in it at all; if you do dream, be prepared for some scary trips; get ready for some changes in your life.
28 people found this helpful
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- David
- 04-10-06
Amazing Book-Bad Audio Book
I love Tony Morrison, and think she is one of the best living authors. However, I had to quit this one--only the second time I have not completed an audiobook. The author reads the book in a monotonous wisper. The combination of her quiet voice and the lack of differentiation of the character's voices made it impossible to keep my attention.
Do yourself and Tony Morrison a favor by passing on this product and picking up the paper book. I have read several of her novels and they are amazing. This audiobook would also be improved by a professional actor/reader in lieu of the author (believe it or not).
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- Guillermo
- 15-10-11
Great novel, poor performance
I don't think this is the place to do reviews of the stories, techniques or narrative structure in books, so I will not comment on the novel itself (a masterpiece, by the way).
The performance of Mrs. Morrison is not good. She has to catch her breath after each sentence and you can hear that. I tried several times to listen but I just couldn't stand it. It is annoying. Narration should be done by professional actors, not by the authors. Recording a book requires different skills than writing a book.
I'd rather sit down, open my hardcover edition and re-read the novel. I want my money back.
38 people found this helpful