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Nine Lives
- In Search of the Sacred in Modern India
- Narrated by: Daniel Philpott
- Length: 10 hrs and 15 mins
- Unabridged Audiobook
- Categories: Religion & Spirituality, Other Religions, Practices & Sacred Texts
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Summary
Shortlisted for the BBC Samuel Johnson Prize 2010. Winner of the 2010 Asia House Award for Asian Literature.
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Overall
- Nakul
- 28-03-13
Pathetic
Dalrymple's book is perfectly decent – sympathetic and informative, though he does rather make all his nine characters sound very like each other. Comes of having to work through interpreters, I suppose, but a good enough job, attentive and respectful. The audio performance, however, is *unforgivably* bad. The generic 'Indian' accents, owing more to Peter Sellers than to any kind of speech actually to be heard in India, were embarrassing enough. But that was a relatively mild problem. Almost no research seemed to have gone into getting the pronunciations of Indian words and place names right: after the first couple of hours, it became almost comic anticipating the next mangling of an Indian name. Rather it would have been comic if weren't so offensive. I don't mean that there were a few mispronunciations here and there – virtually *every* Indian word is mispronounced, the stress inexplicably put on the final syllable (something which almost never happens in Indian languages). Sometimes the reader couldn't even get the consonants in the right order (Ramayana? Ramanaya?) Sometimes he mangled even *English* words (toddy, jaggery) with Indian etymologies. And in the final story, the producers seem to have gone to sleep – failing to cut out his false starts and stammering. A pathetic excuse for an audiobook. Listeners, and the book, deserve better. I'd ask for my money back if I could.
16 people found this helpful
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- Azathoth
- 26-12-19
Dalrymple is a gateway to India
Nine lives was excellent. I've read many books by Dalrymple before and really appreciate his writing.
The narrator tries to imitate accents while reading. since this book is so heavy on quotes, the greatest part of the book is read by what is a fakeish Indian accent. I must admit I found that quite distracting.
2 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 14-03-21
Giving up. Interesting tale, dreadfully read.
I'm considering buying the paper book. I would really like to hear the story, which is fascinating, but the narrator's really peculiar and profoundly irritating "accent" is destroying my ability to concentrate.
1 person found this helpful
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Overall
- Medhavi_Patel
- 13-07-12
Amazing India!
I loved listening to this book, full of amazing detail and educational in so many ways.
Depicts many things that need to change and also which need to be preserved.
I would recommend this to anyone passionate about India!
3 people found this helpful
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- Amit
- 04-01-20
Good stories & Analogy, accent used is gloomy.
Good stories, which are true, very few may actually understand the way they are.
The accent used was bad, there was over exaggeration of accent, which was sometimes offensive.
There was some errors during the read which were kept, please rectify it before publishing.
Overall good read, takes you through the journey how different life can present.
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- S_Kam
- 01-09-19
Fantastic story but very poor narration
The author has done a great deal of research and presented the book in a brilliant way. He is very sympathetic to the characters. He also comments how the Indian society is changing and how will it impacts the lives of rural Indians.
However, sadly, the narrator seems to have done very little research on the pronouncing the Indian names. Also he fails to mimics a fake Indian accent.
My advice - if possible read the real book.
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- Sangeeth
- 10-07-17
Good Read
Varied stories. Varied lives. Definitely a cultural induction for an Indian looking at exploring this wonderful land of diversities.
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- Steve_Morris
- 02-06-15
Interesting perspective on Indian religious people
This book is rather long to keep listening to. But the people's life stories and beliefs are fascinating. Modern India seems a long way away - these people remind me of religious orders from Medieval times in Europe.
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- Saminathan Suresh Nathan
- 29-12-21
Good book let down by terrible narration
It was fascinating to hear about these lesser known practices of India. Unfortunately, the narration, and in particular the voice characterisations, was terrible. This is pretty much the 'black face' of the audiobook world and is distractive at best but completely offensive at worst. Sadly it takes away so much from the content of the book.
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- Arvind
- 18-05-18
Good Book Rendered Awfully
The author tries to bring out the contrast of the perceived India and the real India. Many of the stories narrated here are known to educated Indians or observant Indians, bringing the same to a global audience is welcome. The sad part though is the narrator has no clue about Indian culture and was often mispronounced the Indian nouns. I wish the author had at least reviewed the narration.
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- Trent
- 02-04-12
Interesting stories, distracting naration
Where does Nine Lives rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?
Ranks in the middle
Would you be willing to try another book from William Dalrymple? Why or why not?
Yes, interesting writing style and great insights into India, though can get a little bogged down.
What didn’t you like about Daniel Philpott’s performance?
Several recording errors were left in the recording, which was pretty annoying.
I found the narrators Indian accents a little distracting at times, especially as at times they were a little over the top. Some of the quoted dialogue came across as a little unnatural, which I would attribute to the narrator 'over performing' the lines.
Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
No, not a 'page turner' as such.
Any additional comments?
A book to be in the right mood for, but some really interesting material. Unfortunately, the narration probably detracted more than it added.