It by Stephen King Audiobook & Text to Speech Guide (2026) — The 45-Hour Commitment

It — Stephen King
First published: September 15, 1986 · Viking
Pages: 1,138 (hardcover)
Goodreads: 4.24★ (1.29M+ ratings) · view
Audiobook narrator: Steven Weber · 44h 55m · AudioFile Earphones Award
Film context: It Chapter One (2017), It Chapter Two (2019), Welcome to Derry (HBO, 2026-2027)
Too long for one credit? Buy the Kindle edition and listen free with CastReader's AI TTS →
It is the longest mainstream audiobook most listeners will ever attempt — 44 hours and 55 minutes in Steven Weber's unabridged reading. That's almost two straight days of continuous listening, or roughly three months of a 30-minute daily commute. The commitment isn't trivial.
This guide covers Weber's production, the free Libby/CastReader paths, pacing strategy for a 45-hour novel, and how the audiobook handles material the 2017/2019 films necessarily cut.
The 45-Hour Math
Most novels run 8-15 hours in audio. It runs three to five times that:
| Speed | Runtime | Daily at 30min commute |
|---|---|---|
| 1.0x | 44h 55m | ~90 sessions (3 months) |
| 1.25x | 35h 55m | ~72 sessions (~2.5 months) |
| 1.5x | 29h 55m | ~60 sessions (2 months) |
| 2.0x | 22h 30m | ~45 sessions (~6 weeks) |
Listeners who power through daily fatigue out around hour 12-15. Listeners who treat It like an ongoing audio-drama project — returning to it over 2-3 months while interleaving other shorter books — typically finish. The novel's structure actually supports this: seven-part division, 1958/1985 timeline switching, distinct Derry vignettes that function as episode-length set pieces. It's the rare audiobook where 2-3 month pacing isn't a failure mode — it's the intended experience.
Three Listening Modes
- Marathon mode — Audible credit + Steven Weber unabridged, $29.95 à la carte or 1 credit. Listen daily across 2-3 months. The reference experience.
- Library / free mode — Libby lends Weber's edition free at most U.S. libraries. It's a perennial borrow with multiple library copies; waitlists rarely exceed 2-3 weeks. No subscription, no purchase, same full 45 hours.
- CastReader AI mode — own the Kindle ebook (often $9.99-12.99 on sale, sometimes free with Prime Reading rotations) and use CastReader on Kindle Cloud Reader for AI narration. The tradeoff: consistent voice throughout (not Weber's range) vs. $0 beyond what you already paid for the book.
Platform-by-Platform Breakdown
| Platform | Cost | Narration | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Audible (Weber unabridged) | $29.95 or 1 credit | Steven Weber | Reference commercial production |
| Libby (free library) | Free (1-3 week wait) | Steven Weber | No-cost route for the reference edition |
| Hoopla | Free, instant | Weber or other | No-waitlist library borrow |
| Audible Plus | Free w/ Plus subscription | Weber (when in catalog) | Check current Plus availability |
| Spotify Audiobooks | 15h free/mo + à la carte | Weber | Spotify Premium subscribers |
| Kindle + CastReader | Ebook + free AI TTS | AI (Kokoro) | 45h consistency, no waitlist |
| Chirp / libro.fm | Variable | Weber | Independent-bookstore Audible alternative |
Option A — Steven Weber on Audible / Libby (Reference Production)
Weber's 2010 Audible Studios recording is the standard. He voices the seven Losers Club members at both child (1958) and adult (1985) ages, keeping each character vocally distinct across timelines — a difficult feat sustained across 45 hours. Pennywise appears in multiple vocal registers: the carnival-barker wheedle when seducing Georgie at the storm drain, the cosmic-menace register in the deep-time sequences, the everyday-neighbor voice when impersonating adults. Weber's range handles all three.
The Earphones Award recognizes this. It's free via Libby at virtually every U.S. library; Libby is the free-version-of-the-reference path.
Option B — Audible Plus / Spotify (Subscription-Bundled)
It has rotated in and out of Audible Plus over the years. As of early 2026, verify current Plus catalog status before using a credit — if it's in Plus, a $7.95/month Plus subscription covers It with no credits needed. Spotify Premium includes 15 free audiobook hours per month which won't cover the full 45h, but chapter-sample listening works.
Option C — Kindle + CastReader (Own-Forever Path)
Buy the Kindle ebook once (often $9.99-12.99 on sale) and you own the text forever. Use CastReader on Kindle Cloud Reader for AI narration via local OCR — it bypasses Amazon's font encryption. The advantage for a 45-hour book: no subscription expiration, no library waitlist, no re-borrow to finish. Pair with Send to Phone for mobile listening during the inevitable commute, walk, or gym sessions you'll need to finish.
The tradeoff is one AI voice throughout instead of Weber's character range. For a book this long, consistency becomes an asset — you're not re-learning a narrator's style every session.
Option D — Physical + Audio Hybrid
Some listeners buy the Scribner paperback plus Libby audio and alternate: read during focused sitting sessions, listen during commutes and chores. The 1,138 pages divide neatly: Part One and the Losers' first summer on paper, the interludes and second timeline on audio, or vice versa. Whichever mode you're in, you're in the same book.
1958 / 1985 Timeline Navigation
The novel alternates aggressively between the 1958 child timeline and the 1985 adult return. On audio this is seamless when the narrator (Weber) handles the voice shift; on AI narration it requires paying attention to timeline markers that Scribner's typesetting makes visually obvious but audio flattens. CastReader's chapter navigation lets you bookmark timeline boundaries manually if you want to track one timeline at a time (not the authorial intent, but some readers prefer it on a second listen).
Pacing Strategy for the 45-Hour Commitment
Listeners who finish It tend to share these habits:
- Don't aim to finish fast. Treat it as a 2-3 month project. Daily 30-45 minute sessions, not multi-hour pushes.
- Interleave shorter books. Audible credits don't expire; queue a 10-hour contemporary novel between acts of It. You'll return to Derry with renewed attention.
- Use the interludes as breathers. Mike Hanlon's historical research chapters are pace-shifts the novel builds in. Don't skip them — but recognize they're different-register material and adjust your expectations for the next chapter's pace.
- Mark the timeline handoffs. If your app supports bookmarks, mark chapter starts where the timeline shifts. When you re-enter after 2+ days away, those markers re-orient faster than re-listening to 20 minutes.
- Consider 1.25x-1.5x. Weber's pacing is deliberate and supports speedup well. At 1.25x you save ~9 hours total. For casual listening during chores, 1.5x is comfortable.
Film & HBO Context
- It Chapter One (2017, Andy Muschietti) — covers the 1958 child timeline. Runs 2h 15m, compressing ~22 hours of audiobook material.
- It Chapter Two (2019, Andy Muschietti) — covers the 1985 adult timeline plus flashbacks. Runs 2h 49m, compressing the remaining ~22 hours.
- Welcome to Derry (HBO, 2026-2027) — announced prequel series set in 1962, covering earlier Pennywise cycles referenced in the novel's Mike Hanlon interludes. Andy Muschietti showrunning with brother Barbara Muschietti. First season reportedly covers the 1962 fire at the Black Spot (a 1958-flashback sequence in the novel).
If you've only seen the films: the audiobook is roughly 8x the material. Mike's interlude chapters, most of the Derry history, the adult deritus before they return — all either cut or dramatically compressed. If you're going in cold: book-then-film is the richer order, because the films assume familiarity with the town's history that only the novel supplies at length.
TTS Settings for Long-Form Horror
On AI TTS tools like CastReader, horror fiction at length has specific considerations:
| Setting | Recommendation | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Base voice | Warm mid-range male (Echo / Onyx) | Sustains attention across 40+ hours |
| Speed | 1.0x-1.25x | King's prose benefits from pacing |
| Pennywise distinction | Markedly different voice if character-switching supported | Unsettling-performed-friendliness lands better than deep-menacing |
| Highlighting | Paragraph sync on | Lets you resume precisely after 2+ day breaks |
| Auto page turn | On for Kindle Cloud Reader | 1,138 pages, you do not want to manually flip |
Buying & Borrowing Links
- Audible (Steven Weber unabridged) — $29.95 or 1 credit
- Libro.fm — Weber edition, independent bookstore Audible alternative
- Libby / Hoopla — free with library card
- Spotify Audiobooks — 15 free hours/mo + à la carte
- Kindle edition — starts at ~$9.99 on sale
- Scribner paperback / mass market — for reading-plus-listening hybrid
Related Reading
- Listen to Kindle Cloud Reader — how CastReader's OCR bypass works
- Send to Phone — desktop-started sessions continue mobile
- Kindle Text to Speech Complete Guide — format-by-format breakdown
- Audible Alternative Free — Kindle-library-to-audiobook cost comparison
- Turn Kindle into Audiobook Free — Libby-to-CastReader path
Forty-five hours is a commitment — but it's also the structural fact that lets It work at all. No film condensation captures what 45 hours of Derry does, and no shorter King novel sustains the same claustrophobic immersion. If you're starting: decide your mode (Libby free, Audible credit, or CastReader AI), set a 2-3 month horizon, and don't rush. Most listeners finish if they give themselves permission not to power through.