Beyond Books by Narrator Karen White

Audio month

I recently had the opportunity to meet Karen White at a narrator luncheon.  We sat right across from each other and I suddenly had 20,000 questions I did not know I had until we were there chatting.  🙂  Thankfully, she gracefully and patiently answered all my questions… and now she is about to answer some more.  Please welcome to Book Journey, Karen White.  ~ Sheila

 

Karen white

Hi I am Karen White and I started narrating books in 1999.  Some of the books I have narrated would be:

Beachcombers by Nancy Thayer

Roots of the Olive Tree by Courtney Miller Santo

The Four Ms. Bradwells by Meg Waite Clayton

The Peach Keeper by Sarah Addison Allen

Here and Again by Nicole Dickson

Not The Killing Type by Lorna Barrett

It Happened One Wedding by Julie James

 

My favorite literary fiction books i have narrated this past year are Here and Again,  What I Had Before I Had You, and  Sea Creatures.  My favorite memoir this year (and very sad as this inspiring woman just recently passed away last week) Until I Say Good Bye by Susan Spencer Wendell.

 

Although the industry conventional wisdom is that it takes 2 hours in the studio to record what we call a “finished hour” (an hour after the recording has been edited and readied for release), for me it’s really closer to 2.5 or 3, depending on the complexity of the writing. I am pretty meticulous and I try to avoid recording many “pickups” (re-recording bits where mistakes were made). Not including breaks, I spend about five hours recording, about five days a week. I usually fill in the rest of my workday with preparing upcoming books, engaging in social media, and looking for work.

 

When I am not narrating,

 

I have two kids, a husband and a dog, so much of my time is spent hanging out with and doing things with them. I go to my girls’ soccer and softball games (and try not to yell too loudly so as to save my voice but am not always successful!). My husband and I like to cook and give dinner parties. He’s great with the grill and various fancy French recipes, I’m a pretty good baker and try to be creative with the veggies. We all like to make pasta together!

 

Karen White, Fruit Galette, Book JOurney, Sheila DeChantal
a fruit galette (one of my favorite things to bake)
Karen White, Book Journey, Narrator
a beautiful evening at the softball field

 

We live near the beach in NC, so in the summer we make trips to the water. There’s an island across the inter-coastal waterway only reachable by boat – it has a gorgeous, uncrowded beach – and we are slowly learning the ins and outs of getting there (you need TWO anchors to make sure your boat doesn’t float away while you’re swimming, you need flips flops to get across the island unless you want 2nd degree burns on the bottoms of your feet, etc.)

 

Karen White, narrator, Book JOurney
Both my girls on the boat heading out to the island

When looking for good audio when traveling, we are huge fans of the Incorrigible Children of Ashton Place series, narrated by Katherine Kellgren. It is hilarious and unique and kept us awake driving across the country last summer.

Favorite movie and movie snack?

I am definitely a popcorn and a coke kind of gal. No butter.I just saw THE FAULT IN OUR STARS and that’s my favorite (I have a short-lived memory). I love movies that make me feel a LOT, whether I’m laughing or crying – and this had both. Besides all the obvious great moments, my girls and I really loved the casting and original song by the guy who led the support group – what is that guys name? See I already forgot. He was spot on, I remember that.

 

Karen White, Narrator, Book JOurney
Elsa!

 

Bonus question – a funny narration happening

This is a little embarrassing, but I burp a lot when I am recording. I’ve directed other people quite a bit, and while everybody inevitably has interesting stomach noises, usually before and after lunch, I think I am the most prodigious belcher. I think it’s a combination of the fact that I drink a lot of Xiao’s Blend tea which has peppermint, which I learned relaxes the esophageal sphincter and the fact that when I’m reading, my diaphragm is just jumping up and down on my stomach as I’m breathing! I self edit as I go now, but I used to feel bad for the poor editor who had to hear all my loud burps. Now I just yell at my body in between takes when it burps too much or makes weird stomach noises (“Seriously!? Shut UP!”), often in the middle of a really good take… 😉

 

Karen White, narrator, Sheila DeChantak, Book JOurney
Prepping a book by reading it on my IPAD

 

 

Please watch this site for June audio book related posts, like this one.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month, Sheila DeChantal, Book Journey

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

 

Then and Always by Dani Atkins

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  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Random House Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date: May 20, 2014

 

 

Rachel Witshire’s life is going better than she could have imagined.  She has a wonderful group of friends including an attentive boyfriend, and she has been accepted into the college she had hoped for.  Then, right before she leaves for college a terrifying accident changes everything.

 

Five years later Rachel still wears the scars of that day, both on the outside and the inside.  When she returns to her hometown for her best friends wedding she is filled with uncertainty of what it will be like to encounter the old friends that were part of that overpowering and sad memory.  Then a fall puts Rachel in the hospital and when she is able to leave she discovers things are not as they were…  her scars are gone, her job is different, and the guy she loves….

but is this a case of amnesia?  Head trauma?  Or is this a reality that Rachel can cling to, no longer knowing what is truth and what is fiction… and not sure which reality she really wants to hold on to.

 

In a word… powerful.  I have read several books over the past year with the “amnesia theme” but this one takes a little different path.  At one point I thought the book felt predictable, and in some ways it was.  Then the air was literally forced out of my lungs as I became fully engrossed as the book reached a conclusion that literally made me say “no way,” with a sense of awe and appreciation.

I listened to Then and Always on audio.  Narrator Susan Duerden was well-chosen for this book.  Thoroughly enjoyable at 8 hours and 45 minutes, a perfect length for a summer listen.

 

 

Please watch this site for June audio book related posts, like this one.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month, Sheila DeChantal, Book Journey

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

Morning Meanderings… So. What Has Happened To Me?

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It’s raining this morning.  Hard.  And that’s ok.  I just finished mowing our yard yesterday evening and I was afraid that the lawn was too dry.  I am in the office all day so this puts no damper on my plans of typing and filing and working on the annual report.

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What I wanted to talk about this morning is blogging.  It amazes me that about a year ago I wasn’t sure if I was going to continue on and that kind of scared me.  Last June I felt in an entirely different place.  I felt too busy to keep up on book reviews and book chats and I posted maybe once or twice a week.  Maybe.  I usually missed writing a Morning Meandering.  I was hardly reading a thing so there was nothing to talk about there, and for a while I took a real look at wondering if my season had passed.

Since my time in blogging, a lot of great bloggers have come and gone.  A few that really inspired me in the beginning of this crazy chatting about books, are hard to find now…. occasionally popping up on Twitter or on Facebook… but nothing on their site – if the site is even still there.  All that time – typing, talking books, chatting, sharing…

gone.

And I had started to think I was too.

 

So what did happen?

I fought for it.  I wasn’t ready to let go of my love of talking books, or my chats with all of you.  I accepted that it was ok to step back and do life and not completely let go.  So that is what I did and slowly throughout late fall and winter I came back…

but really it was the book expo this year in New York that sealed the deal for me.

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I love the expo.  I love my bookish relationships that I have made here talking to book lovers on this screen, and then meeting them in real life, and still chatting books with them.  I LOVE talking to authors, and publishers, and the heads of publishing houses about what makes them tick.  When at the expo, my mind flows with blog post ideas…

topics of publishing houses

connecting with narrators

audiobook week

blogiversary

meeting bloggers (I actually don’t like that word) meeting like-minded Book lovers

events

amazing books coming soon

author events

 

I literally started making a list of ideas on the plane home.

 

Soon I will be reaching a mile stone post.  I see it coming and I am excited about it because it is crazy to think that for the past 5 years I have chatted books and life to you and I am as energized now as I was when I started.  How crazy cool is that?

I can’t imagine going anywhere any time soon.  This post was to hopefully inspire any of you out there that are on the edge of deciding, “do I go on?”….  its ok to take breaks.  This is supposed to be fun – not a chore.

And I….

am having fun.

 

If you are a book reviewer/lover/chatter… ok ok, blogger, how long have you been doing this?  If you have been doing it for a while are you surprised how long you have been doing it? 

What energizes you to keep going?

 

 

Oh yeah – and don’t forget – it is audiobook month (I wont let you forget!)  GIveaway here for a $25 gift card.  An entry for ever comment you have on an Audiobook related post that I have up this month.  To help you out… here is what they are:

 

Intro to Audiobook Month

The Acting Of Narration with Johnny Heller

Delicious by Ruth Reichl

A Day In The Life Of Narrating by Narrator Therese Plummer

The Beginning of Narration by Narrator Allyson Johnson

The BEST audiobooks according to the listeners

If I Can’t Have You by Gregg Olsen and Rebecca Morris

Top 5 audiobooks according to narrator Tavia Gilbert

Look Ma!  NO hands!  Audiobooks MY Way!

Things To Look For When Picking Your Next Audio by Narrator Xe Sands

Things To Look For When Picking YOUR Next Audiobook by Narrator Xe Sands

Audio month

I admit, there are not a lot of narrators that I recognize by name on the audiobooks I listen to. Xe Sands is the exception.  Xe Sands is also (so far) the only narrator that I have looked up and picked audio not by book title or author… but because she narrated it.  Please welcome to Book Journey, Xe Sands. ~Sheila

 

Xe

Hello!  My name is Xe Sands.  I started narrating in 2010 and just passed the 100 audio books I have narrated mark.  Oh gracious!  Let’s cull that a bit.  LOL!

 

Most recently I have worked on literacy and historical fiction including Wonderland, by Stacey d’Erasmo, Euphoria (with Simon Vance) by Lily King, The Transcriptionist by Amy Rowland, and The Witch of Truro (from Blackbird House) by Alice Hoffman.  I have also just completed Vision in Velvet (6th in the Witchcraft Mystery Series) by Juliet Blackwell, Motherless Child by Glen Hirsberg, Something Sweeter by Candis Terry, Forged by Jacqueline Frank, and Never Marry a Viscount by Anne Stuart.

I do also enjoy listening to audio.  I spent years listening to them with my daughter during our morning/afternoon commute.  These days I find them especially wonderful to listen to while I am doing something I *really* don’t want to do, such as dishes, exercise, folding laundry… well, CHORES of any type actually.  🙂  I find them incredibly distracting in the very best of ways.  There have even been times that I’ve dragged a chore out just so I could finish a particularity well-delivered scene.

 

I find audiobooks incredibly distracting in the very best of ways. ~Xe Sand

 

My topic today – is to tell you what I think a listener should pay attention to when choosing audiobooks.

 

First, I think a listener should figure out what type of storytelling they enjoy.  Do they enjoy a full storytelling experience, with differentiated characters and appropriate rise and fall in emotion, or an “audio theater” type of experience with sound effects and different voice actors, or perhaps a more straight forward read, naturally delivered, but with little variation of voice?

 

Then, within that preferred type of experience, they might think about how enunciation is to them vs. a very natural delivery, whether or not they can tolerate shifts in volume, etc.  For example, Neil Gaiman, one of my favorite authors and narrators, tends to be a fairly quiet and intimate narrator, and that suits his books perfectly.  So although I might fiddle with my volume control while listening, I wouldn’t have him deliver it any other way – it’s perfect for the material.  However, having to tweak the volume can prove frustrating for some listeners and adversely affect their experience.  Good to know what you can tolerate going in.

PicMonkey Collage

Sometimes it is also helpful to consider whether the material is going to be appropriately served in audio.  There are books that simply work better in print, or that lose something in the translation to audio…  books with extensive charts, graphs, etc., or those with very clever or entertaining illustrations or maps.  Those types of books are excellent candidates for a tandem read – having the print version handy for reference as you move through the audio.

 

Next, listen to the first chapter (or at the very least the full sample available – better yet, several) to get a feel for the delivery style and cadence of the narrator.  Are you able to sink into the story and essentially forget the narrator, as a separate entity?  Do you find their voice pleasing (you’ll be spending a good number of hours with it!).  If yes, then it is a good sign that you’re in for an enjoyable ride.  Basically you are listening for a delivery that melts away and leaves just you and the story.

 

Basically you are listening for a delivery that melts away and leaves just you and the story. 

 

If you have a few narrators who have led you into amazing journey’s in the past, you can always start to look for books based on the narrator.

Sheila asked me what makes for good (and great) listening.  That’s such a tough question to answer in a broad sense because each listener brings their own preferences to the listening experience.  So I’ll just offer what makes a listen compelling to me.  Here’s what I’m looking for:  a natural delivery.  I want narration that makes me believe that if I closed my eyes, it would be just me and the narrator, sitting somewhere, them telling me this really odd/cool/weird/amazing series of events that happened.  Just that.  I don’t give a fig about their enunciation – I just want them to sound like they do when they’re talking to me in person, telling me a story, with dialog that sounds as if I was in the room when it was originally exchanged, and with emotion that feels real to me, as if I was witnessing the scene myself.  That’s what makes great listening for me – natural, connected to the emotion, PRESENT.  The rest, such as enunciation or consistent volume, etc?  That can all go by the wayside if the storytelling is solid and they are truly present with it.

 

 

Please watch this site for June audio book related posts, like this one.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month, Sheila DeChantal, Book Journey

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

Look Ma! No Hands! Audiobooks My Way!

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So…. you probably know that this is audiobook month.   I am having a blast sharing with you audio reviews, narrators thoughts, and now – I will let you know how I do like to do audio.

 

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In my car…

Some people think that you do not listen to audio in the car unless you have LONG commutes or on road trips… not true.  Audiobooks actually work on short commutes as well… it’s true.  They don’t blow up in your cars CD player or anything if they play for less than 30 minutes.  Urban legend people… its not true.

I listen to audio in my car almost everywhere I drive to.  Work may be only ten minutes away – but round trip that is 20 minutes more into a book than I was before.  I love turning on the car and getting into the story.  When choosing car audio, I like the book length to be around the 7 -9 hour mark.  I reserve longer audio books for longer road trips so I can listen to it in large chucks of time.

 

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In my CD player in the house…

This is probably the “old school” version of audio listening but when you have many delicious audio’s on CD around and you want to listen to them, you do what you have to do.  I have trouble downloading audio onto my computer, so instead I listen to the DVD’s.  This is great for when I am working on a craft project, cooking, folding clothes, painting.. I love listening to audio in the house while I am doing other things that require use of my hands.

 

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On my Phone…

What has turned out by fr to be my favorite way to listen to audio, is my phone.  I use Audible.com which I LOVE LOVE LOVE for downloading great audio directly to my phone.  I have used Audible for three years now and yes I am kind of a living breathing walking advertisement for them.  The audiobooks are reasonably priced, they have great sales a few times a year, and your first one is free.  If you try an audio and don’t like it you can exchange it.  No kidding.

When mowing the lawn or gardening, or even biking – I pop my ear buds in and can listen to my Audible audiobooks.  My phone is easier to move through the house then the CD player so I use it when I am on the move from one area to another.  I even use it at work when I am alone and working on filing.  I sit it on my desk and listen as I work.

My brilliant purchase that I made about 6 months ago to go with my listening to books on my phone was:

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An external speaker.  This, when turned on will pick up the Bluetooth in your phone and amplify the audiobook.  This makes it easier to move around an area and say, leave the phone on the counter and still be able to hear it.

These cute little external speakers come in all shapes and sizes and start around $9.96 and can go up to $99.  Don’t knock yourself out.  Mine was $14.96 and works wonderfully.  It’s cute, shaped like a clam shell and its orange.  What’s not to love?

 

I usually have three audiobooks going at once and that works for me.  For you  – If you are new to audio I recommend audible’s free trial.  You have seen many posts on great audio here this month – choose wisely and enjoy.  I absolutely want to hear about your experience.

 

For those of you who do do audio (yes… I said do do), please share here what ways you like to listen.  Remember, this is an audiobook post so comments qualify for the giveaway for this month. 

 

 

Please watch this site for June audio book related posts, like this one.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month, Sheila DeChantal, Book Journey

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

Top 5 Audio Books… according to Narrator Tavia Gilbert

Audio month

 

I began narrating in the fall of 2007, so I’ve been a full-time narrator for almost seven years and have recorded close to 300 books. I have so many beloved projects, including Let Me Stand Alone — the journals of Rachel Corrie, many books of non-fiction by the brilliant Annie Dillard, several wonderful Carlotta Carlyle mysteries, Kate Christensen’s memoir, thrillers by Allison Leotta, science fiction by John Scalzi, young adult fiction by Katherine Paterson, children’s stories like The Wizard of Oz and the Velveteen Rabbit...and more. If you visit TaviaGilbert.com/full-audiography, you’ll see my complete audiobook listing, with my personal favorites highlighted in blue. I’m fortunate to have been given great books to voice throughout my career the years, and have some more fantastic book projects on the horizon.
Tavia Gilbert
Five amazing audiobooks? It’s very hard to choose just five, but here’s a list of a few favorite audiobooks!
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The Fault In Our Stars, by John Green, narrated by Kate Rudd (young adult)
Kate inhabits this story, which has been such a smash hit in the last couple of years. I couldn’t stop listening to this book, and at the same time I couldn’t bear for it to end. I’ve never listened to an audiobook twice, but this might be the first multiple-listen experience. Kate was exceptional in her performance, fully bringing the characters to life, capturing every bit of wry humor, creating such a nuanced reading that I was absolutely captivated.
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Rise & Shine, by Anna Quindlen, narrated by Carol Monda (contemporary fiction)
I love listening to Carol Monda’s narration, and this is a great performance of a compelling story. I’ve told Carol how I feel when she begins a story — I totally and completely trust her. I relax in her masterful presence, because I know that she will not make a wrong turn anywhere along the path. Her pacing is perfect, her characterizations spot on, her dialogue true to life, her heart completely open and her work completely in the moment. I’m a better narrator because I’ve listened to her work.
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The Sunday Philosophy Club Series, by Alexander McCall Smith, narrated by Davina Porter (literary fiction/philosophy)
I adore Davina Porter’s narration of Isabel Dalhousie’s stories. Alexander McCall Smith is a captivating, charming, contemplative writer, and this series is just fantastic. Davina creates soulful, heart-felt, fiercely intelligent voice performances — she’s the perfect medium for the compassionate and thoughtful characters Smith writes. This team of writer and voice actor is unparalleled, and I luxuriate in the listening experience.
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Call the Midwife, by Jennifer Worth, narrated by Nicola Barber (memoir)
I fell in love with the British television series, Call the Midwife, and later equally delighted in Nicola Barber’s narration of the memoir by Jennifer Worth. Nicola’s characterizations and accents are spot on, and I was riveted by the story. Call the Midwife fans will be pleased to hear story lines that they recognize from the TV show, but those unfamiliar with the series will quickly become devotees of the young British midwives and Catholic sisters whose lives make this a wonderful listen.
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The Millennium Trilogy, by Stieg Larsson, narrated by Simon Vance (thriller)
You cannot go wrong with a performance by Simon Vance, and the dark, terrifying, thrilling Swedish series is excellent. Simon is a master story-teller, and he was perfectly cast for this series. His characterizations are never over the top but always differentiated, the suspense horrifying with his subtlety and nuance, the timing and delivery impeccable. These books are not for the faint of heart, but they’re even better with Simon’s performance.
And a bonus question….
And this isn’t a funny narration story, but a sweet one:
Years ago, years after I graduated from Seattle’s Cornish College of the Arts, one of my most beloved college voice and speech teachers, Stephanie Kallos, left full-time acting and teaching to concentrate on her writing. 
Her first novel, Broken For You, was beautifully narrated by Anna Fields, one of the best narrators in the history of audiobooks. 
Anna died tragically when she was trapped in her Seattle recording studio during a flood; the loss to the audiobook community was enormous. 
When Stevie’s second novel, Sing Them Home, was published, I was very new to the narration art-form, but because it was the novel of a dear friend, I wanted the opportunity to do the project, and I campaigned for it. 
Being told that the novel was mine to voice came with a feeling of great responsibility, because I so wanted to make Stevie proud, I wanted to reach the bar that Anna Fields had set, and the story was long and complex and crazy challenging — multiple dialects, Welsh language, and singing, as well as several distinct main characters and about 100 characters in total, including a very young child, and a 100-year-old man — who sang in Welsh! 
It was a daunting project then, and it would be a daunting project now, six years and hundreds of books later. 
But I had a fantastic director, and we worked very slowly and carefully on the performance, and it won my first Earphones Award. 
Most importantly, Stevie loved the work, and I felt that I had, in fact, honored Anna Fields by taking everything I’d learned from listening to countless books she’d narrated, and doing the very best work I was capable of. 
Stevie is publishing her third novel next year, and we are both so hopeful that I will be invited to narrate the project. Her writing is extraordinary, and it’s so special voicing a story that someone I love carefully crafted, so I’d be thrilled to work with her again. Our fingers are crossed!
Tavia

Please watch this site for June audio book related posts.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month, Sheila DeChantal, Book Journey

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

The Beginning Of Narration as told by Narrator Allyson Johnson

Audio month

I’m Allyson Johnson, and I took a rather circuitous path to becoming an audiobook narrator.  First let me just say that I have always, always loved books!  One of my fondest childhood memories is going to the Chicago Public Library with my mother, choosing and checking out books, then taking them home, where I would proceed to read them aloud to my stuffed animals.  (As an only child, this was as close as I could get to having someone listen.)  So I guess, in a way, I was a narrator from the beginning.

 

allyson johnson, narator, Sheila DeChantal, book journey

It wasn’t until 7 ½ years ago, however, that I actually incorporated audiobook narration into my career.  After moving to New York City with a Psychology degree, I did social work for a number of years, before making a career shift into tv production.  It was there that I began doing voice-over work and found a calling, of sorts.  After I left television, I started working with a coach, to learn the craft of voice acting, mic technique, etc.  This led to work in commercial, promo, and industrial voice-over, which I’ve continued to do for almost two decades.  But I longed for opportunities that would expand my skill set…that would allow me to depict characters who didn’t necessarily sound like me.

 

My first books were Children / YA titles, from early readers like “Corduroy”, to a lovely series about race relations in Depression-era Mississippi, by Mildred D. Taylor.  Her “Let the Circle Be Unbroken” remains one of my favorites.  I also voice the ongoing Honor Harrington space opera series (a genre that is such fun to record), by David Weber.  I recently had the privilege of narrating “Harmony”, a wonderful sci-fi classic by esteemed scenic designer, Marjorie B. Kellogg.  And I was honored to be chosen by author Ntozake Shange to read her poetic memoir, “Lost in Language & Sound”.

Allyson Johnson, narrator, Sheila DeChantal, Book Journey
Allyson… the early years, the die was cast…

 

When I’m assigned a book, the first thing I do is get out notecards, a pen,and a pencil (some initial choices might need to be erased later).  Even in this digital age, I prefer having hard copies of my notes  to refer back to.  Those cards have come in handy on more than one occasion.  You should see the stack I’ve compiled for the Honor series!  Next I open a couple of bookmarked dictionaries on my computer.  Sometimes I need foreign language dictionaries, in addition to the English ones, depending on where a book is set.  You’d be surprised how many words you think you know until you actually look them up!  Rule of thumb – if there’s even a chance that you might get it wrong, check the dictionary.

 

Once I’m all set up, I settle in to read the book.  The whole book, from start to finish.  It’s important (especially with fiction) to know in advance where the story is going and how the characters develop / interact with one another.  I also find it essential to know which characters, besides my protagonist, are going to talk a lot.  Because I don’t want to give them voices that I can’t maintain for several hours.  And there are many times when an author does not indicate where a character is from, therefore what accent s/he should have, until quite a ways into the story.

Allyson Johnson, Book Journey, Sheila DeChantal
A shot from this year’s Audie Awards (L – R: narrator Eva Kaminsky, me, Audible Producer Kat Lambrix, narrator Lauren Fortgang)

My performing background is more musical than anything else.  So I’ve always approached narration from that viewpoint.  As I prep, I’m hearing the characters speak in my head and taking notes on any vocal traits the author gives me.  There is an inherent rhythm to sentence structure, so I’m also marking places where I know I’ll need to breathe, and underlining words that need emphasis.  Unlike rehearsing a play or a song, I won’t have the opportunity to go over and over a line (unless I mess it up in the booth…which happens all the time) so I find these little cues save me time.  If I stay “in my head” while prepping, I can stay “out of my head” while recording.

 

 If I stay “in my head” while prepping, I can stay “out of my head” while recording.

 

As I read, I’m marking my script so that I can tell who’s talking before I say the sentence.  For me, this generally means writing the first letter or two of their name in the left margin.  Some narrators highlight different characters in different colors, but my mind is a little more linear and a little less visual.  Occasionally, I mentally yell at authors who have a predilection for creating multiple names that start with the same letter, but overall this system works for me.  I like to keep two sets of notes for each book — one with character names, brief descriptions, and vocal choices, another with words and phrases that I need to look up, or ask the author about, later.

 

Nowadays, you can find many resources online, some with audio pronunciations (a godsend).  For instance, there are sites like http://www.dialectsarchive.com/ where you can hear people speak English in a variety of native accents.  http://www.forvo.com/ is useful for hearing foreign words spoken by natives.  In addition, you can find all sorts of things on YouTube, like the way a “real” person says his or her own name, or how someone from a specific place says the name of a town.  And I’m a huge fan of calling a local Chamber of Commerce or Embassy.  The folks who work in these places are always friendly and eager to help you get their regionalism right.

 

Once all of the preliminary prep is done, I go back over my notes and make choices about how I’m going to do each voice.  Frequently, I can simply write these down in shorthand.  I don’t rehearse them, per se.  But for books with lots of characters, I get out my digital recorder and read a few sentences in that person’s voice, so that I can refer to them in the session.  With a series, this consistency is particularly important because sometimes you go months or even years between books.  However, a listener might be listening to them back-to-back.  I prefer to record with an engineer, whenever possible, to have another person’s ears helping me maintain my energy, my accents, and catching those mispronounced words that I was oh-so-sure I knew!

 

The hardest part of narration?  Hmmm….  I guess that would be when there are lots of characters who are the same-sex, same basic age, from the same place, all speaking to one another in a scene.  You have to come up with creative ways of distinguishing them, without taking the listener out of the story.

Allyson JOhnson home studio, Book JOurney, Sheila DeChantal
Allyson’s home studio

My favorite part of narrating happens in the booth itself.  You know…the part most people assume narration is but that, like most worthwhile endeavors, can only happen after much work has been done.  At this point, I get to sit down and do what I love to do best…tell a story.  I can stop thinking about the book intellectually and just flow with the prose, living in the characters’ worlds for those blessed hours when I get to leave my own world behind.  It is this experience of breathing life into the writer’s words that is the most fulfilling.

 

I asked Allyson a bonus question, “if she were to write a memoir, who would she want to narrate her story?”   To be honest, I’m not sure who I would want to narrate my own memoir, besides…er…the obvious 🙂  I can’t really give you a specific name.  But I’d want it to be one of my fellow journeymen…an audiobook narrator who’s had lots of experience recording books, who shares my reverence for the craft and art of making words sing.

To see more information on Allyson, please check out these links:

www.allysonsvoice.com

www.facebook.com/allysonsvoice       

www.twitter.com/allysonsvoice

 

 

Please watch this site (Book Journey) for June audio book related posts.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

A Day In The Life Of A Narrator – w/ Narrator Therese Plummer

Audio month

My name is Therese Plummer and I started narrating Audiobooks about 9 years ago. I have narrated over two hundred books. Some of my favorites have been The Virgin River and Thunder Point series by Robyn Carr, Tender is The Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Want Not by Jonathan Miles, Faith by Jennifer Haigh, The Family Fang by Kevin Wilson to name a few. I feel so lucky to have narrated so many amazing stories!

 

Therese Plummer, narrator, Sheila DeChantal, Book Journey

So a typical narration day for me starts with a really good nights sleep and plenty of it, 8-9 hours ideally. I will wake up and in the shower I will use a netti pot which clears out the sinus passages and do my vocal warm ups which include a variety of facial exercises, tongue-twisters and diaphragmatic breathing. I drink a liter of water. I will eat a light breakfast of a banana or oatmeal and have an almond milk cappuccino. Once I am at my studio, if it is going to be a six-hour day, I will ask my engineer if he/she will arrange the microphone so I can stand. I find my breath support is better on longer days if I stand. I will usually work an hour or hour and a half before taking a break. After two or three hours we will break for lunch and go back and work another few hours. A normal recording day is from 10am until 4pm. When I am done I usually don’t talk much for the rest of the night. If I have other prepping to do I will do that at home or just relax and get another good night’s sleep for the next days session.

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What I enjoy most about the narration process is bringing this entire story and cast of characters alive. It’s like a one woman show every day. It’s amazing when I have been able to narrate with other actors on a story. It really is such a creative process. All of the theatrical experience I have has to come through my voice in the sound booth and it is imperative that I am able to convey that emotion vocally since that is all my audience has to go on. I am in someone’s earbud for hours at a time and as such the volume and intensity of stage acting must be minimized but just as effective to transport them through the story. It is such a creative challenge learning how to do this from book to book. I learn from every book I have recorded.

 

The other thing I love about my job is the community of actors I get to work with every day. The Audiobook community from the actors, engineers, producers, bloggers and publishers are the nicest group of people I have ever met and worked with. It is a big family and I hope I get to tell stories with all of them for a long time.

 

Check out more on Therese at her website:  http://www.thereseplummer.com/

 

Please watch this site for June audio book related posts.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

 

Morning Meanderings… I Like BIG Books

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Morning everyone.  🙂  I am at Camp Benedict this week, doing my thing as a board member.  It has been beautiful this week so far, talk of rain possible for today and tomorrow but right now looking at a clear blue sky I am not seeing it.

YAY!

I have been helping with craft projects, lining up horse back riding, massages, a few pranks (* ok, really only one where I took another board members shower curtain).  😉

I have been reading a little :

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My roommate, Camryn (from my YA review tab) also brought a few reading materials with her:

 

Sheila DeChantal, Book JOurney
Camryn is 15.

 

As I have been mentioning, it is audiobook month and I am hopeful that you have had a chance to check out the audio related posts that I have been putting up this month.  Remember, we are having a giveaway this month:

 

Please watch this site for June audio book related posts.  For every post you comment on in June that has this audio book symbol:

Audio month

I will put you into a drawing for a $25 book certificate for each comment (Barnes and Noble or Amazon – your choice).  Winner will be drawn in July.

Here are the posts that qualify that have gone up so far this month:

 

Intro to Audiobook Month

The Acting Of Narration with Johnny Heller

Delicious by Ruth Reichl

 

What are you reading today?  What are you LISTENING to today?

Blogiversary YEAR 5!!! Biggest Giveaway Of The Year!

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Holy smokes???  5 Years!  I never thought that when I started this “on-line book journal” (that’s what I thought I was doing in the beginning), that it would take me on this AMAZING adventure ride!  This year I would like to list a few things that have changed in my life in the past 5 years mainly due to this little project website I call Book Journey:

 

  • I was asked to write for a local magazine after an editor seen my reviews here

  • I learned about the Book Expo in New York by reading other blogs and have just returned from my 5th year attending, representing this blog site.

  • I have met the most incredible people through blogs and then in many cases, in person which blows my mind, and they have become great book friends – you all know who you are 😉

  • 3 years ago I did not have a library card :shock:, but reading other blogs helped me realize that this is an important part of our community and I have since carded up, became President of our local Friends Group and was put on our City Library Board.

  • I have participated in World Book Night the past three years

  • I have been asked to speak on panels around Minnesota and beyond (most recently at the book expo!) on blogging, writing, and reaching readers

  • My advocacy for books has risen times a zillion…. I will talk books any day… any time 😀

  • I have learned A LOT about social networking, blog “curb appeal”, and advanced my knowledge of the internet.

  • I have written a book and have connected it to publishing houses.  *fingers crossed*

  • I have made wonderful relationships with the Publishing world and have learned much.

  • Don’t even get me started on the wonderful authors I have had the privilege to meet and talk with.

  • Myself and a team created the Wine and Words event in Brainerd Minnesota, a literacy fundraiser and I invited authors I knew from the expo to come and talk books…. and they did.  (My heart overflows with gratitude!)  The event was such a success last year, that we are doing it again this fall and 5 authors are coming again.  ♥♥♥

  • Just yesterday I was called by MALF (Minnesota Association Of Library Friends) and asked to be nominated to be on their board.

Non of this would have happened without Book Journey.  Sure, pre-Book Journey I was a reader, but nowhere near to this extent or involvement.  I think those of you who have book blogged for a while can relate to what I mean. 🙂  For this… all of the above… I am so grateful.

 

Enough about me.  This blogiversary is really my celebration of YOU!  The readers!  Because seriously… as much as I enjoy talking books… I LOVE LOVE LOVE talking about them with you.  I love your comments, your questions, your occasional emails, and honestly… I love it when I see Book Journey on your sidebars (if you blog) – to this day it gives me a little “SQQQUUEEEE” inside that you enjoy reading my crazy ramblings here enough to add me so others may come visit too.  You are what makes Book Journey a well…. Book Journey.  You are why I get up in the morning with COFFEE CUP and turn on my laptop and share with you the inner workings of my day, life, work, wins and fails, and the books I am reading.

Thank you.

For today only, as in past years… I offer up a set of giveaways.  A few of these books are duplicates from the expo, many are from my personal stash.  I will add what is in each group shortly here – right now I just want to get this post up (I meant to write this last night but instead went with a friend to the movie Fault In Our Stars, then out for appetizers and to chat and got home after midnight.  *oops*  😉  Winners will be announced tomorrow morning – Sunday June 8th.

 

BookJourney, Blogiversary, Book Expo

 

 

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As per tradition,

For those of you who have come to my party the last few years, the basics are pretty much the same… to be entered for the great giveaways (pictured above), simply leave me a comment here telling me how you traveled to the party, and what virtual gift or food item you brought with you:  For example, you may have come by freight train to the party and brought with you Twinkies … (really be as crazy as you want… I love the fun imaginative comments!) For a little bonus if you would like to share how long we have known each other (blog or otherwise) and if you are brand new to the house of Book Journey – feel free to share that too!  I love new friends!  :D