If you're hunting for a legal audiobook of 'Black Silence', I usually start with the big retailers because they're the fastest and most reliable:
Audible (Amazon), Apple Books, Google Play Books,
kobo, and
Audiobooks.com commonly carry mainstream titles. I like Audible for its robust search, samples, and narrator details; Apple and Google are great if you prefer buying straight into your phone ecosystem. Kobo sometimes offers DRM-free options depending on the publisher, and Kobo sales can be sweeter if you collect credits or coupons.
Outside of the giants, I always check
Libro.fm to support local indie bookstores — you buy through a neighborhood shop but get the digital file, and that feels good.
Chirp and Downpour are two other places where you can sometimes find deeply discounted titles or DRM-free purchases. Don’t forget publisher or author websites either; small presses occasionally sell audiobooks directly or link to exclusive editions. For a completely legal no-cost route, your public library is golden: OverDrive/
Libby and Hoopla often have audiobooks for loan, and availability rotates but it's supported by publishers.
A few practical tips from my own browsing: compare price versus subscription value (Audible credits versus outright purchase), listen to the sample to check the narrator, and check region availability because some titles are geo-locked. If you prefer physical copies, some stores still sell audiobook CDs. I’ve snagged a couple of rare recordings that way. Overall, I always try to buy or borrow through legitimate channels — it supports the narrator and the creators — and finding the right edition (narrator, file format, DRM) makes the listening experience that much better. Happy listening; I hope the narrator grabs you as much as it did me.