
Ed King
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Narrated by:
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William Hope
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By:
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David Guterson
About this listen
In 1962, when mild-mannered actuary Walter Cousins sleeps with the sharp-tongued, not-quite-legal British au pair Diane Burroughs, he can have no sense of the magnitude of his error. For the brief affair sets in motion a tragedy of epic proportions. At the centre is Ed King, an infant given up for adoption who becomes one of the richest and most powerful men. But beneath the gripping story of Ed's seemingly inexorable rise to fame and fortune is a dark and unsettling destiny.
©2011 David Guterson (P)2014 Audible, Inc.Oedipus for our time
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So many coincidences
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A very interesting story
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What would have made Ed King better?
If he had kept it up the way it started. It deteriorated after the first episode and the final third of the book terrible.What was most disappointing about David Guterson’s story?
I was really surprised how that I disliked this novel as I thought Snow on Cedars was excellent and East of the Mountains was nearly as good. Although it has a few interesting moments and some witty observations, it just didn't engage at all. None of the characters was likeable, nor do we get into their lives because the events are skimmed over like a summary.This novel reminded me of the film Royal Tenenbaums. It has the same slightly facetious air but, whereas the film is consistent, it felt to me that Guterson couldn't decide whether it was to be serious or a parody. It shifts between serious moments and slapstick, which might work if it was funny but it wasn't, and I don't think it was even trying to be funny.What didn’t you like about William Hope’s performance?
His English accent for Diane, one of the leading characters, is so bad I found it genuinely unpleasant to listen to. In fact he has a peculiar way of making all of the dialogue sound facetious. At first I didn't mind but it got progressively more annoying. He also frequently drops the volume, which means if you listen in the car you suddenly can't hear. Sometimes he uses a range of expression but it is inappropriate expression and by the end it was grating on me like someone scraping their nails on a blackboard.If you could play editor, what scene or scenes would you have cut from Ed King?
I would have told him to go back to writing stories like Snow on Cedars, then I would have got the reader who read it.Any additional comments?
I hate to be negative to an author I previously rated so highly, but for me this was a total flop.Half parody, half serious, never funny
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