Something just occurred to me to ask the group in general:
Do you think the first sentence is as all-important in audio fiction as it is in the written version?
I've always heard/learned that you had to make your first sentence as "hooky" as possible to grab your readers and compel them to read sentences 2 and 3 and....
But I wonder if the same is true for Escape Pod, Pseudopod, and Podcastle. Do you stop listening if the first couple of sentences out of the mouth of the reader don't "grab" you, or do you feel compelled to keep listening even if the first sentence isn't stellar?
My own feeling is that it's different because of what I'm doing when I'm listening as opposed to reading. When I'm listening, I'm generally driving, flying, or doing something else where I'm a "captive audience." When I'm reading, I'm generally only reading and am otherwise unoccupied. I once listened to an entire audiobook I LOATHED from the first half of the first chapter because I had nothing else to listen to (this was pre-iPod days) and it was better than the radio. Had I been reading the book, I would have stopped after about one paragraph. As for Escape Pod, Pseudopod and Podcastle, I find that even the stories I don't particularly love, I listen to anyway, because it's already on the iPod, I'm busy doing something more important, and it'll be over in xx minutes, anyway. And several times, I've found that if I kept listening, I wound up liking the story anyway. If I were reading The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, I would have just turned to the next story.
I'm just wondering if others feel the same.