13 “Unpausable” audiobooks for your listening needs – Modern Mrs Darcy
I’ve shared unputdownable books, not just once but twice. These are books that for a variety of reasons—plot, pacing, the timing in my reading life—I simply could not put down.
When you transfer that idea to the audio realm, what you’ve got is an “unpausable” audiobook. (Hat tip to team member Brigid for coining the term.) An unpausable audiobook is one that has me taking the scenic route home, walking the extra mile, washing every dirty dish in the kitchen, folding every piece of laundry (and then actually putting it all away, gasp!), and generally doing anything that will give me a few more minutes or hours of listening time.
For me, these unpausable audiobooks are often tense and suspenseful, with a strong sense of narrative drive that keeps me listening. But I’m also inclined to listen to “just one more chapter…” and then another, and another, of books that feel like important conversations with trusted confidants (which is why you’ll see a fair amount of memoir on my list), or when I’m so intrigued by or immersed in the story’s world I don’t want to leave it, or when I’m holding my breath waiting to see what will ultimately become of characters I’ve become deeply invested in. And of course: the narrator’s performance is a crucial component in the how-much-laundry-gets-folded equation.
When reviewing my reading journal recently, I noticed that I haven’t exactly been killing it in the audiobook department this year. I’ve spent an unusually high percentage of my listening time with audiobooks that have been fine, serviceable, or just okay—worth the listening time but definitely not standout selections. That realization got me thinking about the exceptions: what exceptional audiobooks have I been listening to lately, and what memorable titles from the last few years do I find myself thinking of often and recommending all the time? That’s how this list of audiobooks I personally couldn’t stop listening to was born.
While this isn’t every unpausable audiobook I’ve read (far from it!), I hope you enjoy this assortment—and I especially hope that it gets you thinking about what makes an audiobook unpausable for you. Please tell us in comments!
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I’m so glad I listened to this real-time nonfiction account of the Brat Pack actor’s 500-mile walk across Spain on the Camino de Santiago with his 19-year-old son Sam. He details the pair’s reasons for embarking on the trip, their long, hot days spent walking 20+ miles a day in the hot summer sun, the fellow walkers they meet along the way, the food they eat, the coffee they drink, the inns they sleep in, what they talk about on the journey. My husband Will and I enjoyed listening to the audiobook together on a summer road trip: the elder McCarthy reads the majority but son Sam frequently adds his own voice, which makes for a wonderful listening experience. 6 hrs 43 mins. More info →
I’ve been recommending this book nonstop ever since I first read it: it’s a provocative novel that thoughtfully interrogates themes of power, class, art, and the queer experience. It reads like a warmer, wittier Sally Rooney, perfect for fans of introspective first-person literary fiction. Rachel is living in London, happily married and pregnant, when she hears the news that one of her long-ago college professors is in a coma. This discovery prompts her to recall a pivotal year in her early twenties, when she lived in Cork, Ireland and met her best friend James while working at a bookstore. As their lives become ever more entangled with those of the professor and his wife, I found myself walking extra miles and folding extra laundry so I could more quickly discover what would happen next. I adored the Irish accents in Tara Flynn’s excellent narration. 9 hrs 22 mins. More info →
This multi-layered Pulitzer Prize winner is told in four distinct parts, each one subtly—or, in the case of the final section, not so subtly—changing the meaning of what came before, and each with its own narrator. Part I is a biographical novel based on the life of an infamous Wall Street trader who flourished after the stock market crash of 1929. Part II is an unfinished draft of the autobiography the trader began writing, with the help of a ghostwriter, to “correct” the novel’s portrayal of his life. Part III is from the point of view of that ghostwriter, and Part IV … no spoilers, but it blows the lid off the whole thing. Structure nerds like myself will find much to appreciate here. Narrated by Edoardo Ballerini, Jonathan Davis, Mozhan Marnò, and Orlagh Cassidy. 10 hrs 21 mins. More info →
I downloaded the audiobook of Ina Garten’s much-anticipated memoir on a whim and couldn’t stop listening to Ina narrate her own story. I found Ina to be the perfect traveling companion during a stressful road trip: chatty, engaging, and soothing all at once. Maybe you should take my words with a grain of salt because I’m by no means a superfan: I have a few Ina Garten cookbooks, I’ve had good luck with her recipes, I’ve seen a few snippets of her TV show while vacationing someplace with all the channels. I’m not a student of Everything Ina—but golly, I loved this memoir in which she covers her early life, relationship with Jeffrey, Barefoot Contessa origins and growth, musings on what makes a recipe sing, her Paris apartment, and more. 8 hrs 47 mins. More info →
I’m not a huge fantasy reader but I folded so much laundry so I could keep listening to this book! Liang based her plotty, romantically-laced historical fantasy on the ancient legend of Xishi, one of the Four Beauties of ancient China. Xishi’s beauty is renowned throughout the land, but when the king’s military advisor discovers she is brave as well as beautiful, she is recruited to use that beauty as a weapon in service of her people. Driven by her sense of duty, she consents, agreeing to spy on the enemy kingdom of Wu by becoming their reviled king’s concubine: her job is to make the man she loathes fall in love with her. I couldn’t wait to find out what would happen next, and was also impressed by Liang’s thoughtful examination of the complexities of womanhood, the horrors of war, the obstacles to love, and even the nature of fame. I wish we could all talk about that ending! Narrated by Natalie Naudus. 10 hrs 22 mins. More info →
This darkly comic satire centers on a Los Angeles-based novelist named Jane who is tired of pouring herself into her work only to barely make ends meet. L.A. is expensive—especially with two kids—and novel writing just doesn’t pay. Jane decides she wants to “sell out” like her friend Brett and become a screenwriter, with its predictable hours and paychecks. But when Jane makes one tiny lie in order to secure a gig, it leads to a bigger one, then a bigger one—and it’s only a matter of time before her precarious house of cards comes crashing down. This was smart, funny, and packed with insider-y publishing mischief. Fun fact: Senza is married to novelist Percival Everett, and she draws on her own life experience in sooo many ways in this (fictional) story. I initially tried this in print and it just didn’t stick but once I switched to the audiobook narrated by Kristen Ariza, I breezed right through it! 10 hrs 14 mins. More info →
While reading this tightly interconnected collection of short stories ranging from 1700s Nantucket to present day New England, I gasped each time I experienced a new way Shattuck played one off another. Shattuck explains in the epigraph that the dozen stories are styled as a “hook-and-chain” poem: they are presented as pairs, with the second story providing a new perspective or fresh insight on what was shared in the first. The first and last stories serve as corresponding bookends, with the bracketed ten stories also divided into complementary pairings. This is the best short story collection I’ve read in ages and I suspect it could happily stand up to multiple rereadings. I’m so glad I read it via audiobook thanks to the full cast, which included Ed Helms, Paul Mescal, Jenny Slate, and Nick Offerman reading me stories. 9 hrs 29 mins. More info →
In this propulsive, genre-blending work, Wilkerson explores grief, trauma, and social justice issues through the lens of one family and its precious heirloom. Ebony “Ebby” Freeman, the twenty-nine-year-old daughter of an affluent Black New England family, suffers a painful and public romantic betrayal in the opening pages. She flees to France to heal but can’t escape the pull to untangle past events—both her recent humiliation and her still-unanswered questions from a trauma she suffered two decades prior. In an alternating timeline, Wilkerson lays out the history of the family’s heirloom stoneware pot and each generation that has possessed it, ever since it was first thrown by an enslaved master craftsman. I couldn’t wait to find out what would happen to Ebby and her ancestors. Narrated by January LaVoy. 11 hrs 26 mins. More info →
This was the Georgian novel that I didn’t know my life was missing, and one of my favorite books of 2021. This family saga spans one hundred years, beginning in Tbilisi, Georgia in the years just before the 1917 revolution, and carrying almost to the present day, unfolding the story of each new generation. I couldn’t wait to find out where the story would carry each character. The family possesses a magical chocolate recipe that they mix up at opportune moments, but whether it’s a blessing or a curse remains to be seen. This book is a commitment but I’m so glad I read it. The ending is amazing. Broad content warnings apply; if you’re a sensitive reader, please do your due diligence before diving in. Wonderful on audio, as narrated by Tavia Gilbert, and translated from the German by Charlotte Collins and Ruth Martin. 40 hrs 55 mins. More info →
Wilson deftly combines the heavy and the light in this found family story of four scattered half-siblings who meet for the first time and pile into an old PT Cruiser to go find the father who abandoned them long ago. Wilson’s stories often feel larger than life, yet the emotional heart feels real and relatable. Quirky, warm, and bighearted, with a multigenerational cast and road trip hijinks galore. I don’t want to give too much away, but it’s no spoiler to say I found this coast-to-coast adventure to be an utter delight. A 2025 MMD Minimalist Summer Reading Guide pick. Narrated by Marin Ireland. 7 hrs 22 mins. More info →
This was the best kind of brain bender! In the opening pages of this time travel mystery, a British woman watches in horror from her window as her 18-year-old son stabs a man on the street. A horrific scene ensues, the police take him away, she spends the evening at the station in shock and agony. But then Jen wakes up the next morning, only to find that it’s not the next morning at all, but the day before the crime occurred. When she wakes up the next morning, it’s the day before that. Jen seems to be living her life backward, and—with the help of a physicist friend-of-a-friend—determines that the only way to break out of the time loop is to “undo” whatever event put her son on the path to murder. To do that she has to go far, far back in time, getting to the roots of her most important relationships. Narrated by Lesley Sharp. 10 hrs 7 mins. More info →
Actor and director Sarah Polley’s memoir-in-essays knocked my socks off. It’s a clear-eyed examination of painful memories from her personal life and decades-long career, ranging from scoliosis to high-risk pregnancy to sexual assault. The title comes courtesy of a concussion specialist who treated Polley and advised her on how to rewire and ultimately heal the pathways in her brain by confronting whatever caused her discomfort. That same approach is used skillfully in each essay. The audiobook as narrated by the author was the right book at the right time for me. 7 hrs 56 mins. More info →
Over the past few years, I’ve gotten into the habit of listening to the latest Hilderbrand on audio, read by longtime narrator Erin Bennett. This 2022 release is my favorite of recent years. When the story begins, the titular hotel’s Gilded Age glory days are long gone: it’s a real dump (and in a fun plot twist—haunted!) when London billionaire Xavier Darling buys it sight unseen. The new owner hires local restaurateur Lizbet Keaton to make his hotel the best property on the island, if not the whole Eastern seaboard. And that means The Hotel Nantucket has to wow Shelly Carpenter, the influencer who’s become a national obsession for her blog Hotel Confidential. The influential critic regularly reviews hotels for her eighteen million followers and awards each property anywhere from one to five keys. The staff is energized by this audacious goal, because no hotel has ever earned five keys from Shelly Carpenter. To earn the coveted fifth key, they’ll have to do everything right. Super fun, and I especially enjoyed the ghost story element! 12 hrs 27 mins. More info →
What unpausable audiobooks do you recommend? Please share in the comments.