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— Reading together, one book at a time
92 members Created Apr 2026

The Vegetarian by Han Kang: a novel that does not explain itself

The audiobook I recommend most often is Lincoln in the Bardo read by a full cast of 166 voices. George Saunders' novel is already experimental — it's composed of fragments, each attributed to a different historical or fictional speaker — and the audiobook makes the formal choice audible in a way that the printed page doesn't. You hear a cacophony of voices debating events and experiencing grief, and the cacophony is the argument.

I read the print version first and liked it. I then listened to the audiobook and discovered I'd missed a significant percentage of what the novel was doing. The experience of voice, of specific embodied speech, is part of the novel's meaning in a way I couldn't fully access through silent reading alone.

This is the case where I'd argue the audiobook is not an inferior format but the appropriate one — a version of the text that better realizes the author's design.

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