{"id":96,"date":"2018-08-04T18:25:06","date_gmt":"2018-08-04T16:25:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/readerwitch.com\/?p=96"},"modified":"2018-08-04T18:25:06","modified_gmt":"2018-08-04T16:25:06","slug":"lincoln-in-the-bardo","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/readerwitch.com\/2018\/08\/04\/lincoln-in-the-bardo\/","title":{"rendered":"Lincoln in the Bardo. The audiobook I couldn\u2019t finish."},"content":{"rendered":"
I spectacularly DNFed Lincoln in the Bardo<\/em> audiobook<\/a>. I used to think the term \u201cDNFed\u201d belonged to the world of race running only – did not finish – but apparently it can be used for a book also. Failing at a book feels somewhat similar to failing at a race – you don\u2019t expect it, as you chose the activity yourself, you trusted your senses and you went for it. You were sure it would be fine. And then suddenly – BAM! It becomes unfinishable, unbearable. Only recently you were excited, anticipating the process but now you long for nothing else but for it to be over already. It gets even more puzzling when you realize that others are doing just fine, gliding along, loving it.<\/p>\n The book got critical acclaim, Man Booker Prize in 2017! In such situations it\u2019s so easy to start thinking there\u2019s something wrong with you. But I\u2019d rather accept there is than listen to a single more minute of it. Maybe a big part of the problem was that it was an audiobook. Had it been a usual book<\/a>\u00a0with actual pages and words, I would have been able to take pauses, study the paragraphs trying to figure out crosseyed with confusion what the hell was going on.<\/p>\n