Tell No One Audiobook By Harlan Coben cover art

Tell No One

Preview

Audible Standard 30-day free trial

Try Standard free
Select 1 audiobook a month from our entire collection of titles.
Yours as long as you’re a member.
Get unlimited access to bingeable podcasts.
Standard auto renews for $8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Tell No One

By: Harlan Coben
Narrated by: Ed Sala
Try Standard free

$8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $21.09

Buy for $21.09

Critically acclaimed, bestselling author Harlan Coben has won the Shamus, Anthony, and Edgar awards during his impressive career. Tell No One is an irresistibly suspenseful thriller infused with nail-biting tension and packed with shocking plot twists.

It has been eight years since Dr. David Beck’s wife, Elizabeth, was murdered by a serial killer. When Beck receives a message containing a phrase only Elizabeth should know, he is tormented to tears. Either someone is playing a sick joke, or the wife he’s never stopped loving is still alive. He’s been warned to tell no one, and as the desperation of his search for the truth intensifies, he heads straight toward a deadly secret.

This audiobook includes an exclusive interview with the author.

©2001 Harlan Coben (P)2002 Recorded Books, LLC
Thriller & Suspense Mystery Suspense Exciting Witty
Unexpected Twists • Engaging Plot • Excellent Character Voices • Suspenseful Storyline • Emotional Depth

Highly rated for:

All stars
Most relevant
A great thriller. A good versus evil mystery with some grey areas between the two. Romance, evil characters, suspense and a pace that makes it a really fun listening experience.

Great Fun

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

What I like best about Harlan Coben is how he weaves social commentary into his mystery thrillers, usually centering around the seamy underside of the New Jersey suburbs where he himself grew up. Tell No One is a good mystery, but it is strictly a straightforward whodunit, without the subtext we've come to expect from Coben.

Still, it's good enough for me to have ripped through it quickly, impatient to see what happens next, who done it, and why they done it. It's pretty obvious early on why Dr. David Beck's world is turned upside down by an e-mail suggesting that his wife, murdered eight years earlier by a serial killer, may still be alive. But the ultimate reveal, after several twists and turns, comes as a genuine surprise.

As with other Coben books, I remain unconvinced that real people would go to these lengths to do what they do. But if you suspend your disbelief over the first event (chronologically), the others actually follow, so it's not all that distracting. On the other hand, I am at a loss to understand why Coben wrote a virtually identical novel some years later -- I won't name it so as not to create a spoiler for anyone who already read that later book, as I have. I liked that later book well enough and don't hold anything against this one since it was written first.

The narration, as other reviewers have noted, is not good. It's not as unlistenable as some say -- IF you crank up the speed (I had it at an unprecedented, for me, 1.5x). That doesn't get you past the fact that Ed Sala sounds like a middle aged man reading the first person narration of a man around 30. But it's not a showstopper -- if you're a Coben fan, don't let the narration turn you off. Plus, if you stick with it to the end, you'll be rewarded by a very nice interview with Coben.

Straightforward Mystery, No Suburban Commentary

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

The narrator oddly puts the emphasis on the second initial in O.J. And T.J.?

But mostly the writing style is killing me. Every time a question is asked, not a single person just answers the question. Instead, they answer a question with a question and make every single interaction tedious. If this were used occasionally for dramatic tension, that’s one thing but the author uses this trope every single time. I also find the protagonist unlikeable. His assessment of everyone and everything is wry and cynical.

Even still, if I don’t finish this story, it will nag at me. I just don’t think I’ll read any more Harlan Coben books.

Dialogue is exhausting

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

Would you consider the audio edition of Tell No One to be better than the print version?

I read this years ago and enjoyed it very much, but was still captured immediately by the plot and reader. It's like a lot of first books by authors venturing into new territory, outstanding.

Riveting

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

Definitely some holes in the plot throughout but was entertaining and suspenseful to the end.

Filled with plot twists it kept me guessing until

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

See more reviews