You should have left / Daniel Kehlmann ; narrated by Peter Noble.

By: Kehlmann, Daniel, 1975- [author.]Contributor(s): Benjamin, Ross [translator.] | Noble, Peter, (Narrator) [narrator.]Material type: SoundSoundPublisher number: MPCD2599 | AVIDSpoken language: English Original language: German Publisher: Rearsby, Leicester : : W.F. Howes Ltd, [2017]Copyright date: ©2016Copyright date: ℗2017Edition: Unabridged MP3 AudioDescription: 1 MP3 CD (approximately 2 hr.) : digital, stereo ; 12 cmContent type: spoken word Media type: audio Carrier type: audio disc | computer discISBN: 9781510070912Uniform titles: Du hattest gehen sollen. English. Subject(s): Authors -- Germany -- Fiction | Screenwriters -- Fiction | Alps Region -- FictionGenre/Form: Audiobooks. | Thrillers (Fiction). Narrated by Peter Noble.Summary: On retreat in the wintry Alps with his family, a writer is optimistic about completing the sequel to his breakthrough film. Nothing to disturb him except the wind whispering around their glassy house. The perfect place to focus. Intruding on that peace of mind, the demands of his four-year-old daughter splinter open long-simmering arguments with his wife. I love her, he writes in the notebook intended for his script. Why do we fight all the time? Guilt and expectation strain at his concentration, and strain, too, at the walls of the house. They warp under his watch; at night, looking through the window, he sees impossible reflections on the snow outside. Then the words start to appear in his notebook; the words he didn't write.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
wnor- audio Northam
Northam Adult fiction
F KEH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available MP3 31111061079768

Translated from the German by Ross Benjamin.

Requires the use of an MP3 enabled CD player or computer.

On retreat in the wintry Alps with his family, a writer is optimistic about completing the sequel to his breakthrough film. Nothing to disturb him except the wind whispering around their glassy house. The perfect place to focus. Intruding on that peace of mind, the demands of his four-year-old daughter splinter open long-simmering arguments with his wife. I love her, he writes in the notebook intended for his script. Why do we fight all the time? Guilt and expectation strain at his concentration, and strain, too, at the walls of the house. They warp under his watch; at night, looking through the window, he sees impossible reflections on the snow outside. Then the words start to appear in his notebook; the words he didn't write.

Narrated by Peter Noble.

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