Best George Guidall Audiobooks

The best audiobooks narrated by George Guidall — 3 titles spanning Fantasy, Science Fiction, Mystery, averaging 4.02 stars on Goodreads.

George Guidall holds a Guinness World Record for the most audiobooks narrated by a single person — over 1,300 titles and counting. A classically trained actor with decades of stage experience, Guidall brings gravitas, clarity, and emotional depth to everything he reads. He's particularly known for literary fiction and classic novels, but his range extends across every genre. His narration of Cormac McCarthy's works and Stephen King's Dark Tower series showcases a voice that can be both tender and terrifying, often in the same chapter.

The list below highlights the best George Guidall audiobooks in our collection, ranked by listener ratings and popularity. George Guidall's highest-rated title here is The Gunslinger by Stephen King (3.91 stars on Goodreads).

  1. 1
    The Gunslinger cover

    The Gunslinger

    The Dark Tower • Book 1

    by Stephen King

    Narrated by George Guidall

    3.91 Goodreads (667.8K)
    3.97 Audible (429)
    7h 19m listening time • Released 2012

    King's most ambitious series begins here — a lone gunslinger pursues a man in black across a post-apocalyptic desert in a genre-bending western-fantasy that grows into something immense.

  2. 2
    The Left Hand of Darkness cover

    The Left Hand of Darkness

    Hainish Cycle

    by Ursula K. Le Guin

    Narrated by George Guidall

    4.1 Goodreads (224.5K)
    4.08 Audible (5.9K)
    9h 39m listening time • Released 2016

    Le Guin's genre-defining masterwork about a genderless society is both a riveting political thriller and a landmark of humanist science fiction.

  3. 3
    The Alienist cover

    The Alienist

    Dr. Laszlo Kreizler • Book 1

    by Caleb Carr

    Narrated by George Guidall

    4.06 Goodreads (182.1K)
    4.49 Audible (7.9K)
    20h listening time • Released 2012

    Carr's Victorian New York procedural follows a criminal psychologist before the word existed — richly researched, genuinely creepy, and compulsively readable.