7 Great Audiobooks for Your Family Road Trip

There’s an art to choosing a good road trip book: It needs to have enough action to keep your attention, appeal across a wide range of ages, and be funny enough that you reach your destination with a smile on your face.

7 Great Audiobooks for Your Family Road Trip

Half the fun of a road trip is getting there, and when the license plate game and reading road signs have slowed their thrill, you can always count on a good book to make the miles fly by. There’s an art to choosing a good road trip book: It needs to have enough action to keep your attention, appeal across a wide range of ages, and be funny enough that you reach your destination with a smile on your face. It sounds like a tall order, but these books are a good bet.

The Boy Who Lived with Dragons by Andy Shepherd, read by Ewan Goddard

Try this if you liked: The BFG

Where do dragons come from? Tomas definitely didn’t expect that one of the dragonfruits from his grandfather’s garden would hatch a baby dragon, but that’s exactly what happens. Hijinks ensue as Tomas tries to figure out how to take care of his new pet — and keep him from destroying the neighborhood.


The Children of Castle Rock by Natasha Farrant, read by Angela Ness

Try this if you liked: Swallows and Amazons

Maybe it's the lilting Scots accent, maybe it’s the eccentric boarding school story, maybe the it’s the three-friends-on-an-adventure plot, but there’s something about this book that’s absolutely irresistible. When Alice’s up-to-mischief father sends her a request to meet him at an abandoned castle in the Scottish wilds, she teams up with two of her new boarding school friends to make the meeting.


The Girl, the Cat, and the Navigator by Matilda Woods, read by Stephanie Foxley

Try this is you liked: The Wolf Wilder

The seventh of seven daughters, Oona yearns to explore the seas with her father on his ship The Plucky Leopard — but, her father insists, that’s not what girls do. So Oona takes matters in to her own hands, stowing away on the ship in hopes of discovering a magical nardoo.


The Vanderbeekers and the Hidden Garden by Karina Yan Glaser, read by Robin Miles

Try this if you liked: The Penderwicks

With Isa off at orchestra camp, the remaining four Vanderbeekers hatch a plot to transform the abandoned lot next door to their Harlem brownstone into their own secret garden. This is a slow-paced, low-stakes family adventure that makes you wish you knew the Vanderbeekers in real life, too.


Peasprout Chen, Future Legend of Skate and Sword by Henry Lien, read by Nancy Wu

Try this if you liked: Roller Girl

Admittedly a little all over the place, this novel about an ice skating kung fu competition (you read that right) powers through on pure adrenaline-fueled fun. Peasprout and her brother Cricket find themselves caught up in a competition that takes a turn for the political.


How to Train Your Dragon by Cressida Cowell, read by David Tennant

Try this if you liked: The Hobbit

Hiccup Horrendous Haddock the Third is tasked with training a particularly bratty young dragon in this book that’s almost nothing like the movie. (And some of us could happily listen to David Tennant read the back of a cereal box for four hours.)


Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card, read by Narrated by: Stefan Rudnicki, Harlan Ellison, and Gabrielle de Cuir

Try this if you liked: Ready Player One

Ender Wiggin tests his way into an exclusive government school determined to win the war that threatens humanity. Meanwhile his brother and sister concoct a political scheme to save humanity from itself. This is a sci-fi classic that will keep you on the edge of your seats.

(We’re Amazon affiliates, so if you purchase something through an Amazon link, we may receive a small percentage of the sale. Obviously this doesn’t influence what we recommend, and we link to places other than Amazon.)This was originally published in the summer 2019 issue of HSL.


Amy Sharony

Amy Sharony is the founder and editor-in-chief of home | school | life magazine. She's a pretty nice person until someone starts pluralizing things with apostrophes, but then all bets are off.

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