A Google user
A. Yes. My wife and I heard it on the way to Chicago from Los Angeles. It was eight disks and took about ten hours to hear the entire story.
Q. How did you like it?
A. For me, it was a difficult listening. The main character, Tully, was pretty boring, but even more boring was his good friend, Willie Singer, and unfortunately, Willie takes over much of the narrative through his long letters to Tully. Tully jumps for joy when his tormentor dies, not exactly a healthy attitude, though a human one. He and his benefactress, Cleopatra, worship their forbears almost the same way that Willie's Cargo Cult worships him and his patron saint. It seemed like Jimmy was making fun of the Cargo Cult but glorifying the ancestor worship by Cleopatra. I think they're both way off.
Q. How was the reading?
A. The reader, whose name I don't recall, was pretty good, but actually, he could not do Hispanic voices, Polynesian voices, or even Caribbean lilt voices. But to give him credit, he had many, many characters to voice, so he did the best he could, though they overlapped quite a bit.
Q. So do you recommend this book?
A. No. It's boring, the listening is, and I assume the reading would be worse. There was nothing to this long saga, nothing morally uplifting, unless you're into pointless escapades and ancestor worship.
Q. What do you mean by pointless escapades?
A. Well, like restoring old lighthouses with original lenses and mirrors. Sure, I know many people are into this type of thing, collecting antiques, restoring them, all that. But why not restore people, instead? Because people are difficult and antiques don't talk back, that's probably why.
Q. Oh, so now you're a philosopher, eh?
A. Sorry, I'm sure Jimmy B. knows a lot more about life than I do.