Love in the Time of Covid Audiobook By Ian Patrick cover art

Love in the Time of Covid

A Memoir in 50 Essays

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Love in the Time of Covid

By: Ian Patrick
Narrated by: Michael Richard
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Love in the Time of Covid is a memoir in fifty short essays written during the Covid era between 2020 and 2024. The essays describe the author's responses to media reports, debates, and public commentaries on a range of current affairs during the course of the pandemic. His primary focus is on the poisoning of social discourse during this period, when there was 'no love lost' in conflicts between adversarial parties.

©2025 Ian Patrick (P)2025 Ian Patrick
Biographies & Memoirs Thought-Provoking Memoir
Comprehensive Research • Factual Evidence • Excellent Narration • Forensic Analysis • Verifiable References

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Listener received this title free

I read my first Ian Patrick book six or seven years ago and wasn't too much into it because of the foreign names, although I thought lots of it was very good. But then I read more, and became transfixed. I thought my first review was a bit harsh but now I think he's a wonderful writer. So this book is very different. It's not a crime thriller but a memoir of the Covid years. It's not about Covid so much as about how we were all misled by the media. I think it is a very, very intelligent analysis of all that went wrong during the 2020-2024 period. I heartily recommend it to readers and listeners (I had read it before I listened to the audio (I got a complimentary voucher for the audio after buying the kindle version), and that was even better than reading it, because the voice and speech of the narrator are very good. All in all, it is brilliant, although I wish the book covered more international politics, but I can't complain because it is very comprehensive, and the essays are all short and very succinct.

Very good writing and narration

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Listener received this title free

Albany, NY.

I've had this book on my Goodreads shelf for a few months and have only just got to it recently. I read the writer's "Ryder Quartet" crime thriller six or seven years ago and loved it, so I wasn't expecting this, which is not a crime thriller. It really is a solid analysis of the failures of the media during the Covid -19 period. Some people will say it's a book about Trump but it's not - the author in fact says on half a dozen occasions that although it might sound like a Trump-supporting book, it's not - he only refers to some very outrageous lies told about Trump as a way of showing how the media can't be trusted to be objective, because they are so deranged by Trump. As I wrote this I looked at a totally scandalous BBC Panorama manipulation of Trump's words in order to spin a defective narrative about the man. They take his speech on January 6th 2021 and cut together two sentences nearly an hour apart, to make it seem as if he's exhorting his followers to violence. It is a total fabrication and I hope he sues them, just as he successfully sued ABC and CBS for similar behaviour. Anyway, I recently received an audio token after having bought this book a few months ago, and it has been a real pleasure to listen to the whole thing again after having already read it once. A really good book.

The audiobook is even better than the book itself

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Listener received this title free

I read the writer's crime books nearly ten years ago and was interested to see this new non-crime book. I bought the ebook and then received a code to get the audio, so read and listened at the same time. I enjoyed it a great deal. The analyses are very short and insightful, and I happen to agree with virtually all of them. The book should be required reading for anyone interested in global issues affecting civil discourse. The recent killing of Charlie Kirk demands that people on both sides return to respect for debate and civil argument. This book comes at the perfect time. I urge everyone to read it.

This should be required reading and listening

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Listener received this title free

This has been a real pleasure to listen to. Honest, articulate, intriguing, and brilliantly researched. I listened to one of this author's books years ago and liked it very much but this was different experience (I'm not usually into memoirs). The examples of how the media mis-represented what was really happening are shocking. The author shows lots of examples and cross-references, so that it's never just his opinion but actually verifiable incidents of mis-representations that he provides. But there's also a lot of humour (I love the way he says his friend only listened to the news that was "kneaded" instead of what he had said he "needed"). The story of the doggie-poo in a bag was hilarious. The final paragraph of the whole book is really good.

Brilliant

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Listener received this title free

I was taken by the preamble of this book, where the author says that during four decades of teaching in a university he doesn't remember ever losing a friend or damaging collegiality, or breaking a relationship, as the result of any argument about substance or form, disputes over evidence and interpretation, debates about style or tone or ideological position, in discussing things with staff and students. How very different, he says, things have become when we now burn buildings because we disagree about such things. This resonates with me, as someone who comes from a family of academics where we all say the same thing but we also say we are scared to say those things publicly for fear of retaliation. This writer is not scared to say these things, and he says them beautifully, with references to evidence every time. A great book to read in order to keep our minds open. (P.S. I got news of this book from a newsletter I signed up to after reading a crime thriller - I was a bit disappointed to see that it wasn't a crime thriller, but, hey ho, I still enjoyed it.).

Having Now listened to the audible version today, I'm even more impressed. What a great narrative voice the author contracted to do justice to his work.

Great vocals on an excellent book

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