Dave Arlington has narrated 4 audiobooks on Listento.it by 3 authors. The most-rated is Sun, Storm, and Solitude.

Throughout our lives, we encounter rejection from those around us - those we love, those we respect, and those in authority over us. Regardless of age, gender, race, religious background, or social status, everyone experiences rejection of some sort. What varies from one person to another is the impact of that rejection upon and within their lives, emotions, and relationships. Dr. M. Stanley Butler tackles difficult aspects of rejection common to many of us - perhaps, common to you - and reveals that even these things are a small part of a greater purpose and design. With an application of spiritual truths, he empowers you to excel and overcome in spite of those who have failed to realize your true value and potential. Your enemy desires that you would be rejected and embittered, but even these things cannot derail your purpose or your destiny because none of it occurs to God. He watches over a plan whose end was declared from the beginning and ensures that every failed relationship, act of abuse, and unfulfilled promise works for your good. There are victories you have yet to realize, and God is waiting to reveal this truth. Sometimes, man’s rejection is God’s protection!
©2015 M. Stanley Butler (P)2020 M. Stanley Butler

Living up to your full potential and moving forward with both zeal and knowledge requires the willingness to sit at the feet of those who can share practical knowledge and experience. Oftentimes, the larger challenge is discerning when it's time to leave the safety of the teacher, mentor, employer, etc., and launch out into the deep that's specifically designed and prepared for you. M. Stanley Butler shares words of wisdom for the entrepreneur, minister, leader, or visionary whose time has come to step out, fully-equipped, into their own work. The greatest of revelations is when you come to know that your time of anchoring another man's work is done. However, before moving whole-heartedly into personal destiny, call, and purpose, you must decidedly lay claim to the better parts of yourself. You must boldly reclaim those things that have been taken, surrendered, and overlooked. You must take back your power!
©2018 M. Stanley Butler (P)2020 M. Stanley Butler

In December of 1988, Mikhail Gorbachev, secretary general of the Soviet Union, came to address the United Nations. Ronald Knapp went to New York for one day to do a segment on Fox TV with Gordon Elliott’s "Good Day, New York", knocking on doors in New Jersey the same day Gorbachev was arriving. He was so successful that Fox said, "Let's hire a limo and turn him loose on New York." The Gorbachev motorcade was on one street, and Gorby Two was on another. Gorby Two shook hands with 100,000 New Yorkers who thought they shook hands with Gorbachev. Even Donald Trump came out of Trump Tower to greet him. The Fox TV cameras captured it for the evening news on Maury Povich’s "Current Affairs". Trump denied he had been fooled, but New Yorkers were convinced otherwise. Everywhere Gorby Two went in Manhattan, people would stop him on the street and say, "You're the guy who got Trump." This was just the beginning of the outrageous adventures he shares in this audiobook.
©2015 Ronald V. Knapp and Adrian S. Windsor (P)2019 Ronald V. Knapp and Adrian S. Windsor

The open road. To many, it means escape, but I wasn't escaping from anything. I traveled more than 6,000 miles by plane, train, and bus to walk in unfamiliar country, but I left behind no process server, no posse, no bounty hunter. No one was looking for me, and no one, other than my wife, knew I had left home. I wanted to see an Italy I hadn't seen before. I wanted to get away from the cares of quotidian life. I wanted sustained, healthy exercise. And I looked for the novelty of the unknown and the unexpected. I found some of each and too much of some. The Cammino di San Benedetto (Way of St. Benedict) lies in the Apennine mountains to the east of Rome. Sometimes dirt, sometimes asphalt, it passes through villages that date to the Middle Ages. It is one of Italy's newest pilgrimage routes, as yet uncrowded and unspoiled. Along the Cammino, I found characters as colorful as the fields and serenety as deep as the valleys. I even found out something about myself.
©2020 Karl Keating (P)2020 Karl Keating