Are you new to audiobooks? Do you have a short attention span, or not a lot of time to devote to listening? Maybe you're making the leap from podcast episodes to audiobooks, or perhaps you just want to listen to as many books as possible to meet your goals. Whatever the reason you might have for seeking out short audiobooks, we've got you covered with some of the best audiobooks under six hours in a wide variety of genres.
These audiobooks may be short, but they're big on action, adventure, passion, knowledge, heartfelt feeling, and thought-provoking insights. Get ready to build your library and experience some of the best short fiction and nonfiction listens available.
Best Sci-Fi Audiobooks Under Six Hours
Sankofa has spent years wandering, searching for an extra-terrestrial object that was given to her and then taken away suddenly. Sankofa is both feared and revered for her unique and terrifying ability—she can cause death without even having to touch a person. But as she searches, she also looks for the truth about her past and the person she once was. In Remote Control, Nebula and Hugo Award-winning author Nnedi Okorafor draws listeners into a coming-of-age story with supernatural twists. Seasoned audiobook narrator and Bridgerton actress Adjoa Andoh voices this audiobook, and you won't want to miss her Earphones Award-winning performance.
A security droid has gained sentience in the darkly humorous and unexpectedly charming All Systems Red. Murderbot, as the droid refers to itself, can't stand humans. It just wants to figure out who it is, and what it could be if it weren't programmed to serve humanity. But when a group of scientists on an exploratory mission find themselves imperiled, Murderbot will have to help them survive. Kevin R. Free narrates Martha Wells's gripping novella and its sequels, which you'll want to download immediately because this series is the perfect dose of dark wit mashed with sci-fi adventure.
Yetu belongs to a group of water-dwelling people who are descendants of the African women thrown overboard by slavers. She is the only one in her society who bears the traumatic memories of their past, the rest choosing to forget. But when the weight of all of her knowledge becomes too much to bear, Yetu flees to the surface, where she finds a completely different world than her own. Based on a song by Daveed Diggs, William Hutson, and Jonathan Snipes, this novella was written by Rivers Solomon with the trio's blessing; Daveed Diggs further lends his talents to The Deep by narrating the audiobook.
Best Memoir Audiobooks Under Six Hours
Written and narrated by the legendary humorist David Sedaris, this collection of essays tells stories from Sedaris's life, beginning with his childhood in North Carolina and continuing through adulthood as he made a career as a performance artist and writer, moving from Chicago to New York to France. This audio edition of Me Talk Pretty One Day also includes live recordings you won't find anywhere else.
In Bossypants, comedian and television star Tina Fey shares stories from her life, spanning from her childhood and the early days of her career to her time on Saturday Night Live, as well as hilarious anecdotes about marriage and motherhood. Fey narrates this pause-resistant, laugh-out-loud audiobook, which also includes bonus, never-before-recorded content.
Best Self-Development Audiobooks Under Six Hours
When bad things happen to us, our instinct can be to shy away from them. But in this heartfelt and honest listen, Pema Chödrön argues that the only way out is through, so we need to embrace life's adversities and the lessons they teach us. Hall of Fame narrator Cassandra Campbell narrates When Things Fall Apart, a profound book about facing difficult times together and finding strength and grace in our connection with others.
Known as the fat Black queer yogi, Jessamyn Stanley believes that yoga is for every body and means so much more than poses on the mat. In this contemplative audiobook, which she also narrates, Stanley digs into the how and why of yoga in every day life. Yoke is an essential listen for anyone looking to deepen their yoga practice and find connections in yoga and everything we do.
Best YA Audiobooks Under Six Hours
Elizabeth Acevedo has won a National Book Award for Young People's Literature, among many accolades, for her works of YA fiction. Narrated by Acevedo and Maria-Luisa Marte, Clap When You Land is a novel-in-verse, and an Odyssey Honor Audiobook, that tells the powerful story of two half-sisters who meet after a tragedy. Yahairo Rios, who lives in New York City with her parents, and Camino Rios, who lives in the Dominican Republic with her mother and lives for the summers when her father visits, discover each other after their beloved father dies in a plane crash, forcing them to decide what it means to be sisters.
With powerful dual narration by Brittany Pressley and Channie Waites, I'm Not Dying with You Tonight reveals the lives of Lena and Campbell, two teens who attend the same high school but are worlds apart. Lena is Black, outgoing, and popular, with many friends; Campbell is white, has just moved to town, and struggles to connect with anyone. When a fight at a football game escalates into a riot in the streets, Lena and Campbell must rely on each other to get home safely. The audiobook is tense, and the pace relentless as it takes place over the course of a single, life-changing night.
Pet is the award-winning YA novel by acclaimed author Akwaeke Emezi about a utopian world where the monsters of old have long been defeated. Jam, a trans girl who is loved and accepted for being herself, is shocked when a creature emerges from her mother's painting and tells her there is one monster left—and it's hurting her best friend's family. Narrated by the book's editor, Christopher Myers, this audiobook tells a powerful allegorical tale about recognizing monsters for what or who they really are and speaking up.
Jorjeana Marie narrates We Are Okay, a Printz Award-winning novel about grief, friendship, love, and second chances. Marin left everything behind, even her best friend Mabel, when she left California for college on the east coast. Now it's Christmas, and her dorm is emptying out, and Mabel is coming to visit. Marin both longs for her best friend and is terrified, because seeing Mabel again will force her to face the truth about the grief that she's been running from, and Marin isn't sure she's strong enough to bear it alone.
Best Nonfiction Audiobooks Under Six Hours
If you want to dive into a history of influential and powerful women that you probably haven't heard of, then Bygone Badass Broads is the audiobook for you! Mackenzi Lee shares the stories and achievements of brave, bold women pioneers throughout history, spanning from the fifth century BCE to present day, who are often overlooked. Lucy James narrates the sometimes informal and often funny accounts of these trailblazers and their remarkable contributions to the world.
Christiana Figueres and Tom Rivett-Carnac, negotiators for the Paris Agreement, have laid out a straightforward path to what the world can do now to avoid catastrophic climate disaster. While cautiously optimistic about the future, they stress that our choices and actions over the next 30 years will be critical for our planet's future and the fate of humanity. Both authors narrate The Future We Choose, delivering two scenarios for 2050: one describing what life on Earth will be like if we act now, with 10 concrete actions to lead the way—and the other that shows what will happen to the world if we don't.
If you're looking for a short nonfiction audiobooks that goes deep into thought-provoking territory, Tressie McMillan Cottom’s Thick is the answer. Cottom is a sociologist, author, thinker, podcaster, and all around insightful observer of life and society. Her eight essays included in Thick cover a range from beauty standards to infant mortality, while her consistent feminist viewpoint explores the many intersections of race, identity, culture, politics, and the sense of self.
Karen Chilton narrates Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and Texas native Annette Gordon-Reed's concise but impactful account of the sweeping importance of Juneteenth in American history. Now a federal holiday, observed on June 19th, to commemorate the day that the news of emancipation finally reached enslaved people in Galveston, Texas, Juneteenth has not always gotten the recognition it deserves. On Juneteenth expertly reveals how this essential piece of history informs so much about our society and our nation, and provides a sobering reminder that the fight for equality is ongoing.