The Secret History Audiobook By Donna Tartt cover art

The Secret History

A Novel

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The Secret History

By: Donna Tartt
Narrated by: Donna Tartt
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About this listen

A READ WITH JENNA BOOK CLUB PICK • INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER • A contemporary literary classic and "an accomplished psychological thriller... absolutely chilling" (Village Voice), from the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Goldfinch.

Under the influence of a charismatic classics professor, a group of clever, eccentric misfits at a New England college discover a way of thought and life a world away from their banal contemporaries. But their search for the transcendent leads them down a dangerous path, beyond human constructs of morality.

“A remarkably powerful novel [and] a ferociously well-paced entertainment.... Forceful, cerebral, and impeccably controlled.”—The New York Times

©2023 Penguin Random House Audio (P)2023 Random House Audio
Coming of Age Genre Fiction Psychological Suspense Thriller & Suspense Fiction Scary Classics

Editorial review


By Kat Johnson, Audible Editor

THE SECRET HISTORY WAS ALWAYS ABOUT THE AESTHETICS

I’m old enough to remember the publication of The Secret History, back in 1992. Like Zadie Smith’s White Teeth almost a decade later, it was one of those rare Publishing Events, when a debut author and novel arrived so authentically entwined that everyone agreed—a literary star was born. Tartt, in men’s pajamas or a necktie and sleek bob, commanded attention. So did the novel, with its premise of murder among classics students at an elite liberal arts college. The Secret History was instantly heralded as an icon of its era. Who knew that, 30 years later, it would perform the same feat for a new generation?

I tore through The Secret History as soon as it came out. Like its narrator Richard Papen, I was a middle-class teenager thrust into a rarified academic world—in my case, a Swiss boarding school instead of a Vermont college—populated by the rich international set. I also wanted to be a writer, and The Secret History set a bar that seemed impossibly high. It’s not one of those novels that makes you think "I can do that"—quite the opposite. It’s simultaneously a complex inverted mystery (like Columbo, it starts with whodunit and then tantalizingly drips out the why and how) and a modern Greek tragedy with characters and prose so compelling, it’s positively hypnotic. I was envious and smitten, and I couldn’t stop reading.

Richard is a California native who is new to both the East Coast and Hampden College, where he’s trying to hide a mediocre background and lack of wealth. In a stroke of luck, he’s invited to join the school’s selective Ancient Greek program, run by charismatic professor Julian Morrow and comprised of five other students. Bunny Corcoran is an all-American preppy type, at home with money and privilege in the style of the Kennedys. Cecilia and Charles are beautiful blond twins with a mysterious relationship and, despite Richard’s love for them, a predilection for offhand cruelty. Henry Winter, tall and reserved, is a polymath and polyglot who’s the smartest and most complicated of the bunch. And there’s red-headed Francis, always wearing a billowing cloak or a pince-nez, who likes boys but is essentially closeted due to the times and his extremely traditional, wealthy family.

These are the main players in a murder that ends with Bunny dead at the bottom of a cliff and buried by snow—hardly a spoiler, since Tartt provides this information in the novel’s exquisitely chilling prologue. In part one, the novel rebuilds beautifully to the climax of the deadly event, while the second part deals with its aftermath, its meditations on beauty, ecstasy, morality, and the taint of murder so seductive that it demands and rewards multiple readings.

Continue reading Kat's review >

Critic reviews

"A beautifully written story, well-told, funny, sad, scary, and impossible to leave alone until I finished. . . . What a debut!"—John Grisham

"Powerful . . . Enthralling . . . A ferociously well-paced entertainment."—The New York Times

"An accomplished psychological thriller . . . Absolutely chilling . . . Tartt has a stunning command of the lyrical."—The Village Voice

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What listeners say about The Secret History

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

I feel wounded by the narration.

I’m so glad I read The Goldfinch first, followed by The Little Friend, and THEN this one. As I have an hour commute, each way, every day, I’m dependent on audio books to keep me sane. The Goldfinch lives in me, haunts me, and always will. But if I’d chosen to do Donna Tartt in order, I’d have listened to the first ten pages of Secret History, and returned it for a refund. I’m honestly not sure if it was a good book…it was so utterly destroyed by the narration. I’ve experienced many audiobooks where I didn’t think I’d like the narrator, but I stuck with it and ultimately found I didn’t notice anymore the annoyances I found in the beginning. But this…this was excruciatingly stabbing me in the ears all the way to the final page. When I saw the author was reading it herself, I raised an eyebrow, but I genuinely WANTED it to be good. I wanted to like her, to find her comforting, to hear her tell her own story masterfully…but no. I refuse to let this change the way I feel about her other books, but I’m afraid this one is eternally tainted.

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10 people found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Novel has seemingly aged poorly

Tartt’s revelation at the book’s opening, that the main character’s have murdered a friend, is all that keeps the story moving forward. In another work this might have been enough. But in a 20-hour work of unlikeable characters, knowing they will eventually kill the least likeable among them, the story drags far too often. There’s little reason to sympathize with anyone and completing the work, with Tartt’s own inexperienced voice narrating characters that lack the unique qualities needed to make them stand apart, was a major struggle.
After enjoying the Goldfinch, this supposedly superior debut work was extremely disappointing.

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5 people found this helpful

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Love Donna Tarts writing

Slow start but worth the wait, I absolutely love Tart and her character development is unparalleled.

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2 people found this helpful

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Brilliant

A great book. I just couldn’t get through the audiobook version - I appreciate the author reading her own text, but it made me lose the voice of the characters.

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1 person found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Layered Storytelling. Wonderful!

Wonderful winding story almost dreamlike. Loved hearing this story read by the author. Nothing better. Highly recommend listening again and again.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Yap Fest

One thing about the author, she sure does love to yap and go off on tangents. The story took a while to pick up. Once it did....it went downhill. I still have 7 hours left and unsure what more is there to tell. I first read The Goldfinch by Ms. Tartt, and that is still one of my absolute favorite books I've ever read. This book however, was a bit disappointing. Don't get me wrong, it definitely has some great moments! Just not sure if it outweighs the questionable one's.

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    4 out of 5 stars

Immersive journey through a dark exploration of the classics

Tartt takes us on a magnificent voyage through a course in classics that doubles as a descent into horrific acts by a group of affluenzed college students. A long but captivating read, we dig deep into our focal characters and explore how the things they do haunt them for years to come.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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New classic

The writing and composition remind me fondly of the classics, while taking a new route to explore and develop truly engaging and enigmatic characters. A true pleasure to follow along with, taking unexpected and jarring turns.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

The narration! Ugh

I’m about 4 hours into this book and I cannot stand the narration. Everytime Bunny talks I expect him to say “old sport”. It’s some sort of odd Cagneyesque nasally voice. There’s a reason why there are professional voice actors. I’m gritting my teeth to get through this.
Also, the main character is from California yet the author’s southern drawl does not assist with making you believe this.
So far the story is entertaining. It is definitely wordy. No strong female characters and the one that is there you have no idea why a character has feelings for her.
I’m powering through but dang, this is rough. Should have just stuck to actually reading it.

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    5 out of 5 stars

Wonderful book, terrible narration by the author

I read this book years ago and loved it. But I wish authors would resist the temptation to narrate their own books. Voiceover work is best left to the professionals.

Her Southern accent is out of place in a story that takes place in New England and includes mostly male characters. Sometimes she switches voices, sometimes she doesn't--there's no reason to it. The California-raised male protagonist sounds like Holly Hunter. The character of Bunny sounds cartoonish. The rest just blend together.

By all means, read the book, but give the Audible version a pass.

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