Great Big Beautiful Life cover

Great Big Beautiful Life

by Emily Henry

Narrated by Julia Whelan

4.35 ABR Score (763.4K ratings)
★ 3.96 Goodreads (748.2K) ★ 4.55 Audible (15.2K)
12h 2m Released 2025 Romance

Why Listen to This Audiobook?

Emily Henry buries something genuinely moving inside a beachy rivals setup, and Julia Whelan's dual narration is what finds it.

  • Great if you want: rivals-to-lovers with emotional depth and a literary mystery backdrop
  • Listening experience: warm and unhurried — cozy island pacing with a slow emotional build
  • Narration: Whelan voices both leads so distinctly the chemistry feels physically present
  • Skip if: you want a plot-driven mystery rather than character-driven romance

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About This Audiobook

Aspiring writer Alice Scott finds herself in direct competition with Pulitzer Prize-winning author Hayden Anderson on the sun-soaked shores of Little Crescent Island. Both have been summoned by the reclusive Margaret Ives, a legendary heiress and former tabloid sensation, who wants her biography written but refuses to choose between them immediately. Instead, she grants each writer a month-long audition period, sharing fragments of her scandalous family history while keeping them bound by strict confidentiality agreements. As Alice and Hayden navigate their professional rivalry, an undeniable attraction complicates their already precarious situation, and Margaret's carefully parceled revelations suggest darker secrets lurking beneath the island's paradise facade.

Julia Whelan's masterful narration transforms Emily Henry's latest into an immersive audio experience that captures both the sultry island atmosphere and the electric tension between characters. Whelan seamlessly shifts between Alice's hopeful determination, Hayden's brooding intensity, and Margaret's enigmatic wisdom, giving each voice distinct personality while maintaining perfect pacing throughout the twelve-hour runtime. Her performance particularly shines during the charged exchanges between the competing writers, where subtext crackles beneath seemingly innocent conversations. The audio format enhances the story's mysterious elements, with Whelan's strategic pauses and inflections adding layers of intrigue to Margaret's fragmented confessions.