Who Narrated The Scarlett Stone Audiobook Release?

2025-08-27 20:11:31 112

2 Answers

Piper
Piper
2025-08-28 01:22:37
I went down a tiny rabbit hole trying to track this down because audiobook credits are my guilty pleasure — there’s something about a great narrator that can turn a so-so book into a favorite commute companion. I couldn't find a clear, single listing that names the narrator for 'Scarlett Stone' in the usual storefronts I checked, which made me think there might be a few reasons for the confusion: multiple regional releases, a recent release that hasn’t updated metadata, or the audiobook may have been self-narrated and only noted on the publisher’s page.

When I hunt narrators I always check Audible first (their product page usually shows the narrator field), then Apple Books, Libro.fm, and Kobo. Library services like OverDrive/Libby also give explicit narrator credits and sometimes reveal editions that retailers miss. If the book was independently produced, the ACX page or the author’s social posts are golden — authors often announce who narrated in a tweet or IG post. Goodreads can help too: look under the edition details or comments where readers often mention the narrator’s performance. If there’s an ISBN for the audiobook edition you can paste it into a store search and it will usually surface the narrator.

If you want, tell me the author’s name or where you saw the release (Audible, publisher’s site, an announcement), and I’ll narrow it down. Otherwise, try the audiobook sample on Audible or Apple — the sample often names the narrator and gives you a taste. Honestly, I’ve found some fantastic narrators just by accident while previewing samples, so it’s a nice way to decide whether to buy. Either way, I’d love to help pinpoint this if you can toss me one more detail — author or publisher, and I’ll keep digging because now I’m curious too.
Zane
Zane
2025-08-31 01:17:37
I did a quick sweep and couldn't find a single definitive narrator credit for 'Scarlett Stone' from the info you gave, which happens more often than you’d expect with newer or indie audiobooks. My go-to quick checks: Audible (look for the Narrator line), Apple Books, and OverDrive/Libby (library listings often have clear credits). If it's indie, the author’s social media or the publisher’s press release usually mentions who narrated — authors sometimes narrate their own books, or they note a professional narrator in a launch post.

If you tell me the author or where you saw the release, I can zero in faster. Otherwise, try opening the sample on Audible or Apple — the narrator is usually named there and you’ll get an immediate sense of whether you like their voice. I’m happy to help track it down if you drop that extra detail.
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