Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (Dramatised)
3.9 | 64 ratings
Price: 17.79
Last update: 12-22-2025
Top reviews from the United States
- M. WoodcoA+ book, stay away from the single CD "audio book"!The book requires two reads. after the first read you can go back and with the knowledge gained from the back half of the book more completely soak in all of the knowledge from the first half. It's amazing how on a second read, all of the details stand out as having a significance well beyond their letters and words.
BUT! Be warned: The CD currently listed here is NOT an audio book. It has a run time of just over an hour! It was just some episode on a talk radio show about the book. Steer clear from the single CD "Audio Book" currently listed as one of the options on the product page. The book is the real deal. - R. MortonHeavily abridged & shortI got part way through this CD and I started thinking of all the stuff, good and bad, that I wanted to say on amazon about this novel on CD. Then I realized that this was a heavily abridged if attractive multi-voice production, and my review wouldn't make much sense. I'll save my extended review for an unabridged CD version, if such exists. As it is, this is one really pricey selection for maybe 2 to 3 hours of listening.
Heavy spoiler alert going forward. So what to say here? I don't know how much this CD is going to make sense to somebody who hasn't read the book. It's a nice reminder to those of us who read the actual, considerably lengthier novel 30+ years ago. Part mystery novel about the author - what did he do to get his brain zapped so long ago - how did he recover from that - what happened to his family in the meantime? Part story of father/son issues. Part philosophical discussion (the part I like least). On the one hand I'd like to say that this man's past sacrificed for his message to the rest of us. But a larger part of me says this guy is bonkers regardless of the message. Maybe both are right. I find a lot of the philosophical stuff mumbo jumbo. I find a lot else objectionable in the actual book, but it is memorable and thought-provoking just the same. I had no trouble remembering specific incidents from this book which I read 1978-ish in confirming how abridged this CD was, which says something about something. So at the minimum it's memorable. - Cathy A.Worth the read, it makes you think.It was an interesting perspective on life and how one lives. It took a bit of getting used to the multi voice and sound effects when you are used to one reader, just reading the book. It kind of reminded me of a radio program of yesteryear. Worth the read, it makes you think.
- Steve BennerOn quality, madness and motorcyclesHad I been asked whether or not I thought that Robert M. Pirsig's seminal, and partially auto-biographical, 70s novel "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" was suitable material for adaptation into a radio play, I would have had to express some very serious misgivings indeed. The book is so long and detailed, and operates on so many different levels, that I would have expected the simplifications necessary to render it into acceptable radio drama to have stripped it of much of its point. It was with some trepidation, therefore, that I came to this double CD recording of the BBC's full cast dramatisation of the book, broadcast on Radio 4 earlier this year. It took no more than 5 minutes' worth of Peter Flannery's masterful adaptation to win me over completely, however.
James Purefoy does a more than credible job of carrying the bulk of the story, as narrator and motorcycling father of troubled teenager, Chris -- played by Max Cazier -- as they travel together on a road trip across America in the late 1960s. The book is also a treatise on the incompatibilities of Western and Eastern philosophical systems, as well as a meditation on values and the concept of "quality", and an exploration of mental illness and its impact on family relationships. To pack all of the book's themes and messages into just over an hour and a half of radio drama is an altogether impossible task although Peter Flannery has done an excellent job of making you believe that he has managed it, honing the text down to its most essential parts without, in the process, sacrificing very many of its threads. Original music by Jon Nicholls, and sensitive and atmospheric sound design by Eloise Witmore, also add greatly to the effectiveness of the adaptation and provide the finishing touches that truly bring this iconic story to life. All in all, this excellent production shows Pirsig's tale to be every bit as relevant today as it was when it was first penned almost 40 years ago.
Containing an extra 10 minutes of material that had to be pruned from the radio transmission, this recording is highly recommended; especially for those who may feel over-faced tackling the book. - Kevin VerlattiGreat narration hits on most themes of full bookWhile it hits on the themes of the book, you do have to be looking for them or have read the full version to easily identify them.