Go on YouTube and type in audio books along with some other search terms. You'll probably find some there. As for the guy who is asking you to pay for links to free audio, he's probably trying to sell you access to stuff from LibriVox, a free service. They record audio books of public domain works. Here's a link. https://librivox.org/Doc, how do I d/l an audio book onto my phone (using Audible), or, do I need a different app to be able to listen?
I remember reading in Grayson Hall's fan club newsletter that a couple of the Marilyn Ross DS paperbacks were available as talking books. One of them was Barnabas, Quentin and The Serpent. I don't remember what the other titles were. I don't have any other information on them, no idea who produced them or who did the readings. I don't think I've ever seen a physical copy of any. So, if any should turn up, they would be true collectors' items.
Doc, how do I d/l an audio book onto my phone (using Audible), or, do I need a different app to be able to listen?
I remember reading in Grayson Hall's fan club newsletter that a couple of the Marilyn Ross DS paperbacks were available as talking books. One of them was Barnabas, Quentin and The Serpent. I don't remember what the other titles were. I don't have any other information on them, no idea who produced them or who did the readings. I don't think I've ever seen a physical copy of any. So, if any should turn up, they would be true collectors' items.
I wonder if she was referring to audio books for the blind that were recorded by volunteers and were not official products sold by a publisher.
I don't know if one could listen to Youtube on a telephone, though. Presumably one could but earbuds or similar would make it a better experience... (I'm still resisting getting a dataplan for my phone. I feel I need to be offline at selected times during the day.)
G.