

I loved the moments of realisation, which even if we can see them a mile away are truly revelatory for Micah! I loved to see what was behind each new door, and how Micah would respond to it. Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you? Which character – as performed by James L.

Also echoes of the Butterfly Effect in terms of how different actions have their own reactions and repercussions, although it's not at all violent or disturbing. Paolo Cohelo, as he brings the allegory to life through simple story telling. What other book might you compare Rooms to, and why? Personally, I preferred to listen to it and think it would have taken me a lot longer to read it. I'm not sure what I did wrong, but I started reading, went to audio, and when I went to listen to it again it took me back to where I had been reading! It is good though, to have the choice. It was the first time I had used this system, which enables you to either read or listen to the book and it will sync to the last point you have got to regardless of format. I bought the ebook and audio as whisper-sync from Amazon. Would you consider the audio edition of Rooms to be better than the print version? His Aussie veered around Scotland and Mid England while skating around American with dropped post-vocalic-Rs. The author isn't so bad at narrating, until he tries to do accents.

I'm sure this is great for someone looking for a novel affirming his or her faith, but if you get it thinking you'll get a mystery or plot or character development that isn't a straight line towards rejecting sins like R-rated movies and working long hours to walk the path of Christ, you'll be disappointed. The main character isn't a person, he is a plot device making choices and speeches pretty much so Jesus, an angel, or God can come in and save the day and quote some Bible verses. I thought I was getting a supernatural mystery, but instead I got a ton of bible quotes and a plot fully telegraphed from the second chapter. So much stuff in the sci fi/ fantasy area is actually YA or, in this case, preachy religious sermons. Audible needs to work on its classification.
