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In the Lake of the Woods
- Narrated by: L. J. Ganser
- Length: 8 hrs and 50 mins
- Categories: Literature & Fiction, Genre Fiction
Non-member price: $29.22
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Publisher's Summary
On a lake deep in the Minnesota woods, Kathy Wade comforts her husband John, a rising political star, after a devastating electoral defeat in which he's been pursued by rumors of the atrocities he committed in Vietnam. But it is clear that something is horribly wrong between them - too much has been hidden. Then Kathy vanishes, along with their boat.
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What listeners say about In the Lake of the Woods
Reviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- T. Prizer
- 05-03-2019
Memory and the Erasure Thereof
As powerful a display of storytelling as I’ve ever encountered. The effects of war, dreams deferred, dreams abandoned, love, and trauma — all set against the backdrop of the great Minnesota wilderness. O’Brien is fantastic, and Ganser narrates beautifully.
5 people found this helpful
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- mulkko
- 05-02-2019
spell bound
I loved every minute of it. this book really made me think about the complexity of the human mind and what we are all capable of as human beings, good and evil.
4 people found this helpful
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- C. Reither
- 08-06-2018
May need a second go
This book is complicated but interesting. There are so many flashbacks and possible story lines and interviews for quotes though that I’m sure I need to read it myself or listen to it again to truly understand it’s intricacies.
2 people found this helpful
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- Peggy Larson
- 24-06-2019
Too gruesome for me
I started listening to this book. I didn't get too far because the story wasn't clear to me and there were some scenes too gruesome even for me. Just didn't grab me and I found the characters set up confusing.
4 people found this helpful
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- page partain
- 31-07-2015
Could not stop listening
Couldn't get it off my mind. Will contemplate its questions for some time. 15 unique words.
3 people found this helpful
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- TiffanyD
- 18-01-2021
Less successful than "The Things They Carried"
I really enjoyed "The Things They Carried" but I felt that this book was less successful both as a human story and as an examination of the Vietnam war. Although it definitely made me want to read more about the Mỹ Lai massacre.
If you are looking for endings that tie things up in a bow, this is most certainly not the book for you, although I wasn't bothered by that as much as I was bothered by how I never felt like I really understood John or Kathy or believed they could be real people.
The narration is completely fine expect for one rather egregious mispronunciation early on ("Edina"). Maybe have a native Minnesotan do a "proof listen" next time?
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- Shipshape
- 12-11-2020
Read - don’t listen
The structure of this book demands reading — it’s a complex, harrowing puzzle but you need to go back to review — also has some wonderful chapters that ‘read’ like a commonplace book. Great experience to differentiate reading and listening. You will have trouble sleeping — it is disturbing
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- Anthony J.
- 04-09-2020
An amazing story with an okay narrator
A great story for those who like to be presented with a mystery and all the evidence and events that occur before a tragedy and left to solve it for oneself. I didn't like the narrator of this audiobook, but that's just a personal preference of mine. There are just some voices I find more pleasing to listen to than others. I definitely would recommend anyone who is interested in learning about the effects of war on a person and their loved ones to read/listen to this. An amazing story.
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- GGsmomma
- 27-01-2015
Too much story for me
I listened to this book for a Literature class. I have read several short stories from the same author. I had a hard time with this one because it felt very redundant to me in comparison to his other works.
3 people found this helpful
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- Molly
- 30-01-2013
Not a life-changing or pivotal war story
I read this book for a book group expecting big things, since I fell in love with The Things They Carried. This.. well it fell flat. I wasn't particularly motivated to keep listening, in part because the story wasn't that captivating. The characters no longer held my interest after getting about 1/4 of the way through. In part, it felt like they were colored *too* much by the narration--I disliked the performance of the wife, which made it harder for me to keep listening.
It might have been better if I'd read it, but I'm not sure. As one person I discussed the book with pointed out, the reliance on the My Lai Massacre and this future senator's role in it felt a bit cheap. The use of multiple possible narratives just didn't strike me as important. The "Evidence" chapters felt a bit like a cop out.
The only thing that felt really honest about the book was its inclusion of testimonials from the characters who participated in the war--O'Brien, as always, managed to capture what it does to a person when you teach them to kill and teach them to fight. I just don't know that I felt this story was necessary to make that point.
4 people found this helpful
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