Degas does not merely read; he embodies. He strikes a delicate balance: he must sound like Bauby, yet acknowledge that he is the conduit for a man who cannot speak.

Listening to this memoir provides a unique, intimate connection to Bauby’s inner world, which he dictated entirely by to select letters read aloud by an assistant. Audiobook Details and Narrators the diving bell and the butterfly audiobook

The audiobook adds a layer of intimacy—listeners hear a human voice articulating Bauby’s internal world—but may risk softening the monumental effort behind each word. Degas does not merely read; he embodies

: Despite being described by some as a "vegetable," Bauby remains a father, son, and artist. His ability to self-reflect and find humor in the "humorous horror" of his situation acts as a "destroyer of disability". Audiobook Details and Narrators The audiobook adds a

There is a richness to the performance that captures Bauby’s background as a witty, sophisticated editor. Bauby was a man of charm and irony, and his writing is not purely tragic; it is often humorous, biting, and sarcastic. A lesser narrator might focus solely on the sadness, turning the book into a dirge. However, a great narrator captures the sparkle in Bauby’s eye—his frustration with a doctor’s tie, his internal commentary on visitors, his lust for life.