Title: Echo
Series: Alex Benedict
Author: Jack McDevitt
Narrator: Paul Boehmer
Publisher: Tantor Media
Duration: 12 hours, 43 minutes
Copyright: 2010
Genres: science fiction, aliens, exploration
Filed in: Audiobook Reviews
Review copy provided by Tantor Media.
SUMMARY: It all started innocently enough. A woman places a local ad to have a stone tablet removed from the house she recently purchased. The tablet made a nice centerpiece for her garden for a while, but now she is tired of it and is willing to offer it to anyone willing to come and haul it away. Interstellar antiquities dealer Alex Benedict is instantly intrigued by the photo of the stone, which is inscribed with runes that do not appear to be in any language known to man. His curiosity is further piqued when he learns that the woman’s house was formerly owned by Somerset Tuttle, simultaneously renowned and ridiculed throughout the world for dedicating his life to the discovery of alien civilizations. Alex and his assistant, Chase Kolpath, have no idea that they are about to embark on a path that could uncover a monumental tragedy that occurred thirty years ago, if they live long enough to reach its conclusion.
When Alex and Chase show up to claim the stone, they find that someone else has already taken it, and the investigation begins. It soon becomes clear, however, that someone is willing to go to great lengths to make sure the stone’s origin remains a secret.
The person who claimed the tablet was Rachel Bannister, who turns out to be a former lover of Tuttle’s. Through their investigation, Alex and Chase find out that Rachel was formerly a ship captain for a company that provided guided tours through previously uncharted star systems. They also find out that Rachel promptly and inexplicably resigned her position immediately after returning from one of the tours, and the company’s records for that time period were all mysteriously purged.
Through their perseverance, Alex and Chase’s search eventually takes them to an unknown star system which they tentatively dub the Echo system. The name proves to be apt when they discover an alien civilization that is a mere echo of its former greatness. Imagine their shock when they finally uncover the link between this culture’s demise, and the secret that Rachel and her former employer’s have worked so hard to keep hidden. But when a hired assassin shows up hot on their trail, they realize that they may not live long enough to tell anyone what they have found.
MY TAKE ON IT: I have to admit that it took me a while to warm up to this audiobook. Much of the first half of “Echo” details Alex and Chase’s investigations on their home planet, mainly by interviewing people who appear to be linked to the mystery. The “leg-work” as you might say, was only mildly interesting to me.
I’m glad I stuck with it, though, because once the main characters blasted off into uncharted space, it got real interesting, real fast. They explored a world with ancient ruins and monstrous beasts, and another world with entire empty cities that appeared to be only recently abandoned, before finally reaching their goal. The climax of the story was so exciting I just couldn’t touch the stop button.
NARRATOR: As to the narrator, Paul Boehmer, in my mind, there is one quality that seperates the good audiobooknarrators from the great ones. That quality is passion. The great narrators read with a passion that the merely good ones simply do not possess. Paul Boehmer is a great narrator because he has that passion.
“Echo” was my first Paul Boehmer audiobook, and like the book itself, I wasn’t at first sure that I was going to like him. It didn’t take me long, however, to amend my opinion. Before I was halfway through the audiobook, his style had really grown on me. Boehmer’s reading of the dialogue between the characters is especially stirring; he reads with an intensity that really helps you identify with what the characters are feeling.
Paul Boehmer, also known as J. Paul Boehmer, has a long list of acting credits in television, film, and theater, including roles in “Frazier”, “Judging Amy”, “All My Children”, and the Star Trek series’ “Deep Space 9”, “Voyager”, and “Enterprise.” He is most proud of his award-winning unabridged performance of “Moby Dick.”
FINAL WORD: “Echo” turned out to be a great audiobook, and I’m glad I had the opportunity to read it. If you read it for yourself, and are not immediately grabbed, give it some time because it is definitely worth it.
CHECK OUT THESE OTHER AUDIOBOOK REVIEWS:
Hull Zero Three by Greg Bear (Audiobook Review)
Mars by ben bova (Audiobook Review)
Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card (Audiobook Review)
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If you like this audiobook review, you can purchase the audiobook here:
Get "Echo", an Alex Benedict novel by Jack McDevitt (Unabridged Audiobook) from Amazon.com.
This audiobook review is based on the unabridged audiobook.
Audiobook review by Steven Brandt
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Oh, that sounds interesting enough to read. Almost has a creepy feel as you lay it out for us. Thanks for the in depth review!!!
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