Biggest Website For Full Audiobooks in Fiction, Historical Best Sellers

Chango's Beads and Two-Tone Shoes Audiobook by William Kennedy


Listen Later

Please open https://hotaudiobook.com ONLY on your standard browser Safari, Chrome, Microsoft or Firefox to download full audiobooks of your choice for free.
Title: Chango's Beads and Two-Tone Shoes
Author: William Kennedy
Narrator: William Kennedy
Format: Unabridged
Length: 13 hrs and 23 mins
Language: English
Release date: 09-29-11
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Ratings: 3.5 of 5 out of 25 votes
Genres: Fiction, Historical
Publisher's Summary:
William Kennedys latest novel is a tale of revolutionary intrigue, heroic journalism, crooked politicians, drug-running gangsters, Albany race riots, and the improbable rise of Fidel Castro. The epic journey of Quinn carries him through the nightclubs and jungles of Cuba and into the newsrooms and racially charged streets of Albany on the day than Robert F. Kennedy is assassinated in 1968. The odyssey brings Quinn and his exotic but unpredictable Cuban wife, Renata, a debutante revolutionary, face-to-face with the darkest facets of human nature, and illuminates the power of love in the presence of death.
William Kennedy masterfully gathers together an unlikely cast of vivid characters in a breathtaking adventure full of music, mysticism, and murder: a homeless black alcoholic, a radical Catholic priest, a senile parent, a terminally ill jazz legend, the imperious mayor of Albany, Bing Crosby, Hemingway, Castro, and a ragtag ensemble of radicals, prostitutes, provocateurs, and underworld heavies. This is an unforgettably riotous story of revolution, romance, and redemption, set against the landscape of the civil rights movement as it challenges the legendary and vengeful Albany political machine.
Members Reviews:
Departure from Albany
This was listed as part of Kennedy's Albany Series, but it has a substantially different tone and style and is only weakly linked to the other novels in the series. It seems to change tone and style as it transitions between Cuba and Albany. The Cuba section seems to either be an nod to Hemingway or just strongly influenced by Hemingway's style. I found this a bit derivative.
In the Cuba section the Hemingway character points out novels should avoid politics, for in a few years readers will want to skip the political writing...yet Kennedy ignores this (fictional and perhaps self referential) advice and plows on, mixing politics into the novel (which did become a bit tedious).
This was very late Kennedy and is the only of his books I did not really love. It was not bad, but it lacked the lightness and magic that permeated the other Albany books. In the other Albany books the story is weak but the characters are transcendent. Here the story is still weak (and a bit jumpy) and the characters are kind of run-of-the-mill.
The author's narration is OK, but not great. The narration is clear and understandable. The characterizations are weak and narration errors were just ignored. This was a reading and lacked the performance aspects of a professioinal narrator.
WONDERFUL NOVEL
I loved this book. Reading could have been better--but great enough. Kennedy wrote it after all. A beautiful job of putting two kind-of-like things (the Cuban revolutions & Albany NY street "riots") together--the whole becoming more understandable than the sums of its parts. It also helped me understand Chicago 1968 better than ever. I almost forgot how delightful musical writing can be.
A disappointing book.
You didnt love this book... but did it have any redeeming qualities?
The narrator was good, but the story was confused and not very well written. I could not finish it.
OK but not great
Is there anything you would change about this book?
The book jumps from Cuba to Albany.
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Biggest Website For Full Audiobooks in Fiction, Historical Best SellersBy DOWNLOAD FULL AUDIOBOOKS FOR FREE ON HOTAUDIOBOOK.COM