Nice little question — I can help with that quickly. Because multiple books share the title 'Render unto Caesar', there isn’t a single universal narrator to name without more detail. Different editions, publishers, and platforms (Audible, Libro.fm, OverDrive/Libby, etc.) often use different narrators, and sometimes the author narrates their own work.
If you want the fastest route: open the audiobook’s product page on Audible or your library app and look just under the title — the narrator is listed there. If you don’t have that page handy, give me the author’s name or the publisher/year from the cover and I’ll narrow it down. I’ll also say this from experience: always listen to the preview clip before buying — a minute of audio tells you whether the narrator’s style will work for you.
Oh, I love little sleuthing tasks like this — book credits are one of those tiny pleasures I check first when I'm about to buy an audiobook. The tricky bit with 'Render unto Caesar' is that it’s not a single, unique title: multiple books, essays, and even plays have used that phrase as a title or subtitle, and each edition can have a different narrator. So the short practical truth is: the narrator depends on which author and which publisher’s edition you mean. If you tell me the author (for example, who wrote the particular 'Render unto Caesar' you're thinking of), I can narrow it down quickly and point you to the exact narrator and edition details.
If you want to hunt it down yourself right now, here’s how I go about it. First, check Audible or Libro.fm and type in the full title plus the author’s name — the narrator is listed right under the title on the product page. On Audible you can also click the narrator’s name to see other books they’ve narrated, and you can preview a minute or two to get a feel for their voice. If it’s a library copy, Libby/OverDrive shows narrator info on the book details page too. Another reliable route is the publisher’s website or the ISBN/ASIN: plug the ISBN into a retailer or WorldCat and the edition details, including narrator, usually pop up. And don’t forget to peek at the audiobook credits inside the player app once you borrow or buy — sometimes bonus material lists full narration teams, producers, and directors.
I’ve learned to be picky about narrators — a great narrator can elevate even a dense nonfiction title, while a voice that grates makes the whole thing feel longer than it is. If you’d like, tell me the author or drop any cover details you have (publisher, year, even cover color helps), and I’ll zero in on the exact narrator. If you already have a sample URL or an Audible link, that’s golden — I’ll walk you through finding narrator credits and give my two cents on whether the voice fits the book’s tone.
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The Price of Peace: Book 3 In The No More Regrets Series
Shay Robinson
10
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The Price of Peace is the final showdown and book three for the No Regrets crew, where the masks come off and the bills finally come due. Shane O’Brien is done playing house. He’s been living his life like a "glorified roommate" with his wife, Isla, ever since she broke their vows with her best friend's husband, but now the cold war is turning hot. While Shane finds a temporary sanctuary with Maya Cruz, Isla is weaponizing their children trying to save a marriage that might already be lost, but will she realize this too late, or burn the whole house down. Speaking of Maya, she has a few secrets of her own, one that involves Mayor Rogers and a scandal that could level the city.
In the courtroom, Crandon Morgan is fighting to keep his name clean after a very public mental meltdown. He’s looking for a comeback, but he finds a distraction in Tempest Summers, a new law junior associate with a haunted past and a hunger for a kind of justice the law books don’t cover.
Meanwhile, Kole Michaels is trapped in a different kind of nightmare. A past mistake named Akeisha is using a legal loophole to pin a child named Urmagisty on him. With his relationship with a different Keisha on the line and his daughter Mabel watching, Kole has to prove he’s being set up before the lie becomes his life.
In this game, peace isn't free, you have to pay for it in blood, truth, or with everything you own.
The night before our wedding, my mother needed a fifty-thousand-dollar emergency deposit for surgery.
I went to my fiancé, Major Adrian Hayes, hoping he would listen before it was too late.
He only saw the number.
He paid the deposit in the end, but something between us broke that night.
That money became the beginning of every name he would ever use against me.
After that, every time I asked him for help, he sent me one hundred dollars.
When I was in a car accident, he sent one hundred dollars. When I begged him to attend my mother’s funeral, he sent one hundred dollars.
Eight months ago, I found out I was pregnant. I sent him seventy-seven voice messages, desperate to tell him we were having a baby.
He never listened.
He only sent seventy-seven payments of one hundred dollars.
Later, when I started bleeding and was rushed into emergency surgery, I called Adrian and begged him to come to the hospital, to answer the doctors, to save our child.
He sent one hundred dollars again.
At the same time, Madeline’s Instagram story showed Adrian in his dress uniform beside her at a lavish officers’ charity gala. The comments all treated them like the perfect match.
I stared at the screen until my hand went numb. I was begging for him from the edge of an emergency room while he stood under chandeliers beside another woman, looking as if he had already found the wife he wanted.
By the time Adrian finally turned his phone back on, his staff officer’s voice was shaking.
“Major Hayes... your wife and the baby did not make it.”
And in that moment, Adrian went feral.
“Do you take love or power?" he asked pointing the gun right at my forehead.
In the underworld of Atlanta, blood ties are not only sacred, but also deadly.
Ariella Johnson, a fearless law student, had no idea she would be bound to ruthless Mafia Don Luis DeLuca. He marries her not out of love, but to gain power, claiming her before his rival. To the outside world, she is his wife and a symbol of strength. But Ariella refuses to be controlled. Defiant and sharp-tongued, she confronts Luis at every turn, refusing to submit to a man who regards her as nothing more than a strategic move.
When her father dies after discovering the truth at the hands of the defeated rival, Ariella's grief transforms into quiet determination. She won’t be a pawn in anyone’s game. As she learns to navigate the dangerous world she has been thrust into, she develops an unexpected bond with Luis' sister, Annie. However, not everyone in his household is an ally—Kendy, a cunning maid, secretly works against Ariella with, ensuring she never finds her footing.
One reckless, drunken night transforms everything. Ariella discovers she is pregnant, forcing Luis to face the truth: his wife is no longer merely a symbol; she is his greatest weakness. But, before he can make things right, betrayal paves in. His most trusted allies turn on him, using Ariella as leverage in a deadly power struggle.
With enemies closing in and time running out, Luis must decide whether to defend the empire he built or fight for the woman who refuses to be conquered. In a world where love is dangerous and trust is a luxury, survival requires knowing whom to protect and who to destroy. Read HIS RUTHLESS REDEMPTION
Staring straight into her eyes, a playful smile curls his lips. "If you agree to be my pet for a year, then you and your father will be free." The devil whispers coldly, with his eyes full of desire.
To save her father who stole from the ruthless mafia lord, Theo Rodriguez. Everyone surrenders to him, but she dares to confront him. Even though she is trembling with fear, her tearful eyes show determination. She knows this will drag her to hell, but still, she says yes. Will this deal that started as a pleasure trade by force grow into more? Will they crave and fall for each other? Or will they just break up when the contract expires, leaving their passion behind?
Grace thought the night to be like every other night she charms a handsome man into giving her whatever she wantes and after a little lap dance and foreplays she would leave, but unlucky for her she happens to run into Denzel, the night turned from what she planned into a night of...
My blood-bonded mate, Prince Dorian, despised me. I was just a mortal to him. A girl with filthy blood.
His eternity was already promised to a pureblood—Cordelia.
When she died in an accident, he blamed me. Hated me for ten years.
But when rival vampires attacked our castle, he saved me.
Bleeding out in my arms, he used his last breath to push my shaking hands away.
"Odette... if only the Bond had never tied us together."
At his wake, they kicked me out. So I climbed to the top of their family’s skyscraper—a place they arrogantly called "Heaven's Needle"—and jumped.
When I opened my eyes again, I was back. Back to the night the ancient Blood Bond chose me as his mate.
This time, I'm setting him free. And myself along with him.
Hey, I've seen this question pop up in different corners of my book-club chats — the short version is: it depends on which 'Romans' you mean, because there are multiple audiobook editions and narrators.
If you're asking about the book of 'Romans' from the Bible, different publishers and translations use very different readers. For classic King James recordings people often cite Alexander Scourby; for modern dramatized New Testament productions you'll sometimes see names like Max McLean or ensemble casts credited by the production company. If your copy is a commentary or a theological treatment called 'Romans' (for example, a study guide or a lecture-by-lecture audiobook), the narrator is frequently the author themselves or a professional narrator hired by the publisher.
When I want the exact name, I go to the audiobook store page — Audible, Google Play, or the publisher's site — and look for the narrator credit. The product details almost always list the narrator, runtime, and edition. If the title just says 'Romans' and doesn't show the narrator up front, check the small print for the narrator or the ISBN, then cross-reference that on library catalogs or publisher pages. That usually clears things up, and you can sample a clip to hear if the voice fits what you want to listen to.
The Romans audio NIV Bible is narrated by a few different voices depending on the version you pick up. I’ve listened to the one by Max McLean, who’s got this deep, resonant voice that makes the text feel weighty and dramatic—perfect for Paul’s letters. There’s also a version narrated by David Suchet, the actor famous for playing Poirot, and his crisp British diction adds a polished, almost theatrical flair.
I’ve stumbled upon some group narration editions too, where different actors handle different books, and honestly, it’s hit or miss. Some voices mesh well, while others feel jarringly mismatched. If you’re after consistency, McLean’s solo work is my top recommendation—it’s like listening to a seasoned storyteller unraveling ancient wisdom.
The audiobook version of 'The Richest Man in Babylon' has a few different narrators depending on the edition you pick up, but one of the most popular versions is narrated by Richard Ferrone. His voice has this gritty, seasoned quality that feels like it’s straight out of an old-school radio drama—perfect for a book that’s all about timeless wisdom and parables. Ferrone’s delivery makes the ancient Babylonian setting come alive, like you’re sitting around a fire listening to a storyteller share secrets about wealth and success. I stumbled upon his version a while back, and it completely changed how I absorbed the book. There’s something about hearing those principles spoken aloud that makes them hit harder, you know?
Another notable narrator is George S. Klis, who brings a smoother, more measured tone to the table. His pacing feels deliberate, almost like a mentor patiently guiding you through each lesson. I’ve listened to both, and while Ferrone’s performance has more theatrical flair, Klis’s version is great if you prefer a calmer, more reflective vibe. It’s wild how much the narrator can shape your experience—same words, totally different energy. If you’re diving into this classic, I’d say sample both and see which voice clicks with you. After all, the right narrator can turn a good book into an unforgettable listen.