Okay, if you enjoy history try The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire (Volume 1) - each volume is around 48hrs each, it might sound like a lot of hours listening but it's a great book and taught me a lot about Roman history.
If you're into sci-fi try the old BBC radio series Journey into Space, Operation Luna (the first in the series).
Interesting. I was thinking more of 'business' stuff, but there's always a correlation between business and topics such as rise and falls of empires. Thanks for that!
If you're talking business books try The Rebel Sell "How the counter culture became the consumer culture". and I book I love for it's story telling is Boo Hoo "$135 million. 18 months... a dot.com story from concept to catastrophe".
I've enjoyed biographies of Augustus and Hannibal on Audio CD. "Augustus" is by Anthony Everett, and sadly I can not find the Hannibal set at the moment. Both lived during at an incredible time of change in Roman history. The stories are interesting, each is better "written" than many a Hollywood drama.
Also, it is just fascinating to listen to accounts from pre-Christian times. The characters share many common human traits with us, but are also deeply different. It will make you question what it means to be human.
I really enjoyed "The Goal" as an audiobook. It makes a good audiobook because it's structured as a novel. Definitely one of my favorite business books.
(it's nominally about running a manufacturing plant, but I think a lot of the takeaways apply just as well to startups)
Radiolab. It is a podcast, not an audio book, but I would recommend downloading the entire set at http://feeds.wnyc.org/radiolab and listening to all of them.
Listen to them in order, oldest to newest. I would not recommend starting with the most recent "Jad and Robert: The Early Years" which is mainly about the hosts.
And if you want to cherrypick one show to start with try: Musical Language.
Can't second this one enough. This is by far the best show on air.
As it relates to business: the show is a veritable collection of case studies revolving around people, culture, and science. Myself: I'd recommend the Space episode.
I like to dig up classic speeches and listen to them in such situations. It's pretty easy to dig them up from online archives, and they're more natural to listen to for me than audio books. Given the top thread at the moment, I can recommend Huxley's The Ultimate Revolution. :-)
I would get a Pimsleur CD course on a language you've always wanted to learn. The complete box set, 14 CDs or whatever, $250. You'll be conversational a few days later, and it requires you to listen actively rather than passively, so you're more likely to stay awake while you drive.
I would strongly recommend the "Behind the Wheel" series of foreign language courses. There were specifically designed for use while driving. Perfect. N'est pas?
I have to second that recommendation. I've been studying Pimsleur's excellent Mandarin Chinese I, II and III in my daily commute and road trips for some time, and I highly recommend it. It requires reasonably active listening and sentence production, so it helps you avoid drowsiness on long trips.
Coincidentally, I'm leaving soon on a car trip to Morocco and was just preparing to sync the free Michigan Modern Standard Arabic and the Pimsleur Egyptian Arabic audio courses to my iPod.
This brings up a good point. What would it take to put "Hackers and Painters" and "Founders at Work" onto CD? I can't imagine anything I'd rather listen to. And both are perfect for short trips because each chapter is stand-alone.
"A Short History of Nearly Everything" by Bill Bryson. It's not a technically a business book, but it's incredibly interesting for anyone who enjoys science. It does have one good business-related concept - it reinforces the idea that just having the best idea doesn't always make you successful or rich - it's the execution that counts.
1. People's History of the United States: Highlights from the 20th century - Howard Zinn
2. Snow Crash - Neil Stephenson
3. jPod - Douglas Coupland
4. the world is flat 2.0
Much of what makes an audiobook great is the reader's grasp of the material. Both of these books are great works of literature, but the skill of the reader makes them even better as audiobooks.
I found a torrent with all of Steinbeck's audio books. There's a great Of Mice and Men read by Gary Sinise. On the off chance you haven't read that yet or are a Gary Sinise fan, it's pretty great.
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[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 34.4 ms ] threadIf you're into sci-fi try the old BBC radio series Journey into Space, Operation Luna (the first in the series).
Also, it is just fascinating to listen to accounts from pre-Christian times. The characters share many common human traits with us, but are also deeply different. It will make you question what it means to be human.
2) Close behind: http://www.teach12.com/ttcx/coursedesclong2.aspx?cid=561&... and http://www.teach12.com/ttcx/coursedesclong2.aspx?cid=562&...
(it's nominally about running a manufacturing plant, but I think a lot of the takeaways apply just as well to startups)
Listen to them in order, oldest to newest. I would not recommend starting with the most recent "Jad and Robert: The Early Years" which is mainly about the hosts.
And if you want to cherrypick one show to start with try: Musical Language.
As it relates to business: the show is a veritable collection of case studies revolving around people, culture, and science. Myself: I'd recommend the Space episode.
2. "Predictably Irrational" by Dan Ariely
3. "The Search" by John Battelle
4. "Made to Stick" by Chip Heath and Dan Heath
5. "The Tipping Point" by Malcolm Gladwell
That should cover your trip. I've listened to all of them and really liked all of them. "Blink" by Gladwell is also good, but not as business related.
I would love to hear any other suggestions people have in this category.
"The Paradox of Choice" by Barry Schwartz was a great read.
http://www.amazon.com/Behind-French-Revised-Complete-Illustr...
Coincidentally, I'm leaving soon on a car trip to Morocco and was just preparing to sync the free Michigan Modern Standard Arabic and the Pimsleur Egyptian Arabic audio courses to my iPod.
The Teaching Company has "The Great Ideas of Philosophy/Psychology" series and courses in economics I'd recommend.
Look for Parsec award winners or Hugo award winners.
It'll only take about forty minutes to finish.
If you go with a Teaching Company course I highly recommend their "Great Minds" series (though without a library it is a bit spendy): http://www.teach12.com/ttcx/coursedesclong2.aspx?cid=470&;
Great interviews with entrepreneurs, and they're each about an hour long -- perfect for road trips.
Complete list here: http://www.venturevoice.com/library.html
Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand
Much of what makes an audiobook great is the reader's grasp of the material. Both of these books are great works of literature, but the skill of the reader makes them even better as audiobooks.
I really liked Cannery Row too.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/bestsellers/books/69726/
http://edcorner.stanford.edu/podcasts.html