7 Amazing Audiobooks That Make Time Disappear

7 Amazing Audiobooks
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Listening to a book can make time disappear during long drives, workouts and boring vacuum-the-house sessions. Here's the best of the bunch -- ones that put you right into the story from first spoken word.

By Leigh Newman

1. Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter
Read this juicy novel for the trip to Italy. Listen to it for the crisp-sounding, English-speaking yet Italian (Edoardo Ballerini) sitting beside you as the guide on that trip -- who can really roll his r 's.

2. The End of the Affair by Graham Greene
I'm only going to say this once: Colin Firth's speaking softly, directly into your ear -- and he's talking about love.

3. The Help by Kathryn Stockett
Unlike the lone narrator of most audiobooks, The Help has four, including Octavia Spencer whose real-life friendship with the author Kathryn Stockett helped inspire the character of Minny. The result? You feel as if you’re sitting in the kitchen with these women from 1960s Mississippi, listening to the story unfold around you.

4. In A Sunburned Country by Bill Bryson
Bill Bryson narrates his own hilarious, thought-provoking nonfiction books, and by listening to him, you hear the story exactly as he wrote it -- with every punchline perfectly different. In A Sunburned Country, a tour of the lethal animals of Australia, isn’t so much about the plot as it is about the quirky nature of both the country and the author. Our alternate choice? A Short History of Nearly Everything.

5. Society’s Child: My Autobiography by Janis Ian
Memoirs and autobiographies read by the author make for such intimate, compelling audiobooks; you get to hear the real voice of the real human being behind the real story (Think about: Bossypants, by Tina Fey and The Glass Castle, by Jeannette Walls.) But Society’s Child -- Ian’s look at the turbulent, eye-opening 1960s -- goes a step deeper by incorporating her songs and guitar music into the recording.

6. The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver
Kingsolver’s novel about a missionary family who moves from Georgia to the Congo is devastating -- and riveting. And when it’s read aloud, you get such a complete understanding each of the four Price sisters, mostly due to narrator Dean Robertson, who creates a completely different, totally believable voice for each one. Be prepared to weep -- and lose the next 12 hours and 10 minutes.

7. Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling
Something about listening to a fairy tale -- even a modern one -- makes all that fictional magic feel so much more potent and realistic. J.K. Rowling’s classic has been recorded by two narrators, but our favorite is Jim Dale for his deep, rich voice that makes each novel sound like a book of spells come to life.

Earlier on HuffPost OWN:

Before You Go

11 Books to Devour On a Long Flight
A Visit From The Goon Squad(01 of11)
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"A Visit From The Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan. So good I read it twice. Johannesburg-London-San Francisco is a long flight."-- Lesley Lokko, author of One Secret Summer (credit:Studio D)
Bel Canto(02 of11)
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"Bel Canto by Ann Patchett. I don't particularly like flying, so it was perfect -- completely absorbing."-- Erin Morgenstern, author of The Night Circus
The Affair(03 of11)
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"Lee Child can shrink a six hour flight like nobody else. I’ve read all of his books, but his last book was The Affair. If he ever stops writing, I might have to stop flying."-- Jacqueline Sheehan, author of Picture This
The Underside of Joy(04 of11)
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"The Underside of Joy by Sere Prince Halverson. Fortunately, I was traveling for work by myself, so my children didn't go neglected. It turns out that you don't need little TVs on the seat in front of you or internet access 35,000 feet in the air if you have a great, great book."-- Allison Winn Scotch, author of The Song Remains the Same
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime(05 of11)
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"The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime. I bought it at the airport in London and by the time we landed in New York, the book looked like it had been through a tornado. That's how quickly I tore through it."-- Jennifer Miller, author of The Year of Gadfly
Room(06 of11)
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"I read Emma Donoghue's Room on a long flight and loved the book so much I almost forgot to disembark at my destination city."-- Kristin Hannah, author of Home Again (credit:Ben Goldstein/Studio D)
Riders(07 of11)
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"It was one of Jilly Cooper's wickedly funny British novels about the upper class -- Riders, a send-up of the rich, sex-made world of show-jumping equestrians. A stewardess asked if I would sit with an unaccompanied 10-year-old, and even though I had stopped every 15 minutes to chat, I was stuck to that book for 7 hours, all the way from Rome to New York."-- Eloisa James, author of Seduced by a Pirate
No Longer a Gentleman(08 of11)
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"No Longer a Gentleman by Mary Jo Putney. There are dungeons (so like a plane!) and a handsome man to rehabilitate (and he doesn't mind at all!). It was easy to get lost in spite of a four-hour delay and wind turbulence over the Great Lakes."-- Cathy Maxwell, author of The Scottish Witch
The Infinite Tides(09 of11)
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"The Infinite Tides, by Christian Kiefer. If you ask Christian what this book is about he will say, 'It is about a depressed astronaut.' But it is about so much more than that. It is about the particular way each of us makes sense of the world, and all the losses within it that combine to make a life. It is about the perfect beauty of mathematics, and the imperfect beauty of the solar system. I didn’t even know I was on a flight, let alone a long one."-- Pam Houston, author of Contents May Have Shifted
The Paris Wife(10 of11)
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"I read The Paris Wife by Paula McLain on a recent flight to Paris and it made everything (at least on the Left Bank) feel very familiar during the week that I then spent in that city."-- Lois Lowry, author of Son
11/22/63(11 of11)
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"Stephen King's 11/22/63, about going back in time to try to stop the Kennedy assassination. It's impossible to stop reading. It got me back from Indianapolis (through Chicago) with my sanity."-- Maile Meloy, author of The Apothecary

Next: Author's reveal "the book that totally surprised me"
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