
The Bourne Identity: Jason Bourne Series, Book 1
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Narrated by:
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Scott Brick
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By:
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Robert Ludlum
About this listen
Now a classic film, The Bourne Identity is Robert Ludlum's first exploration into the bewildering and chilling world of Jason Bourne. Exciting, fast-paced and powerfully written, you won't escape unchanged.
He was dragged from the sea, his body riddled with bullets. There are a few clues: a frame of microfilm surgically implanted beneath the skin of his hip; evidence that plastic surgery has altered his face; strange things he says in his delirium, which could be code words. And a number on the film negative that leads to a bank account in Zurich, four million dollars, and a name for the amnesiac: Jason Bourne. Now he is running for his life.
A man with an unknown past and an uncertain future, the target of assassins and at the heart of a deadly puzzle. He's fighting for survival and no one can help him - except the one woman who once wanted to escape him....
©1980 Robert Ludlum (P)2008 Random House AudioFive star story
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Gripping at times
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This is partly due to Ludlum's heavy handed overwritten style, partly to the reading. Can't do anything about the text but certainly a decent selection of reader can overcome a book's shortfalls to some extent by injecting extra life where needed.
The Damon movie almost certainly drew many readers to check the book, and I've sure many found themselves listening to an entirely "rewritten" tale. Only thing is - it was the film that was rejigged. Inevitably, comparisons are drawn. Usually in terms of which one was "best" - disregarding how many different bookish aspects might be considered. If the book and the film had had different titles, then each might have been accepted as a different entity and considered on its own merits.
Bu that's not the world we live in.
The film was faulty in continuity, laughably so in places such as the snow scraped back then reappearing on the embassy fire escape immediately before he shins down the building's rear face and meets Marie, under completely different and far simpler circumstances from the novel. The book's too complex to be made into a watchable flick. And the book's curlicues of scaring the Carlos entourage by multiple injections of rabid nonsense... that was overcooked to the point of being risible.
The book is faulty.
The film is faulty, differently so. And works on a Carlos-free plot that needs few complications.
Re-edit the book, get a decent reader, this would be a far better listen than it is.
If I'd to have only one at the exclusion of the other, I'd choose the film. Because it's livelier.
But also because they wisely got rid of the overwritten overdone romantic stuff, plus that awful recanted phrase Cane is for.. etc. That "got old real fast" for me, every time it resurfaced I felt like tossing the book away. Only there was no book to throw. Frustrating.
Several readings over many years.
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excellent
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Exciting if a little drawn out
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GREAT
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Great story, some dodgy accents but overall good.
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Thoroughly recommend this. At 20-odd hours, plenty to get your teeth (or ears) into and exciting enough to keep you coming back on your next journey. Will be searching out more by this narrator.
Great Narration
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Good overall
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Unfortunately and unusually for the narrator Scott Brick, it is his performance which makes the book difficult to follow at times, there is not enough differentiation of voice between the characters to make it clear who is involved or when it is the flashback rather than the present which is being performed (which resulted in having to rewind several times to be clear on what’s happening).
Will I continue with the series - Yes
Would I welcome a change of narrator - Yes, which is a shame as he does a good job with the Tom Clancy novels, however this story is more intricate and is more suited to the skills of Titus Wellever or RC Bray to make this an absolute classic.
Difficult but worth it
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