Truth Like the Sun Audiobook By Jim Lynch cover art

Truth Like the Sun

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Truth Like the Sun

By: Jim Lynch
Narrated by: Richard Poe
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About this listen

Internationally best-selling author and Washington State Book Award winner Jim Lynch's Truth Like the Sun was named one of Amazon's Best Books of the Month.

In 1962, Roger Morgan became the golden boy behind the Seattle World's Fair. Nearly 40 years later, he's a shoo-in for mayor. But when an ambitious journalist begins digging into his past, sordid details about his career come to light.

©2012 Jim Lynch (P)2012 Recorded Books
Fiction Historical Fiction Literary Fiction Political
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What listeners say about Truth Like the Sun

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great story

characters were great. History was interesting and Poe was great as always. It is worth a listen for sure.

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  • Overall
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I'm a big Jim Lynch and Puget Sound history fan

I love the stories Jim writes because he is one of the very few writers that captures the essence of the Salish Sea region the way I have experienced it as a 70 yr old native born photographer and historian. I worked in 'politics' for quite a while so this particular story, detailed, loaded with history and yet nuanced, was particularly fun and educational as it really reflected how things were done back then and maybe in many ways the way things are still done. Or, probably why things don't get done? Admire a writer when at the end of their story you want to start at the beginning again.

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1 person found this helpful

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Scoops and Pols

This intriguing novel alternates between Seattle in 1962, when the Worlds Fair opened, and Seattle in 2001, when the whiz-kid "father of the fair" resurfaces to run for mayor. The conflict between an aggressive but thoughtful young journalist and the pragmatic, candid civic leader is the heart of the book. While the characters didn't quite come to life for me, the novel presents a realistic look at the ethical dilemmas faced by both ambitious politicians who do what they can for their towns and careful journalists who struggle under deadline and pressure from their editors.

As the novel moves toward its climax, there is real tension over the kind of news story Helen, the reporter, will ultimately write about Roger, the mayoral candidate. Questions linger over the main characters' integrity and drivers--as well as that of potential news sources. Subplots involving the personal lives of the main characters and cameo appearances by celebrity visitors to the fair--LBJ, Elvis, John Glenn, Benny Goodman--provide entertaining diversions.

Richard Poe is my favorite narrator. He brings the right level of drama to his narration, with pauses just when you want to think about what is happening (too many narrators just plow ahead after a startling plot development, and I have to turn off the audio for a while to think about it). He brings the right amount of color to the voices of the characters. A great choice for this enjoyable novel.

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6 people found this helpful

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Digging with a teaspoon

I have three hours left and so far the dirt digging has been minimal. None of the characters have real depth, and seem to move through their worlds in a bubble. I’m hoping for a decent payoff but guessing I’ll be disappointed. The narration is excellent, which is one reason I got the book, but I’m glad it was free.

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